Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Video Copilot - Blog #7

The Internet is an amazing tool. A quick search on YouTube will provide you with almost anything you need to know. Or it could provide you with hours of distraction. For example: watching all of the All State "Mayhem" commercials here.

In my pre-teaching days, I interned for a video production department. Fresh out of college and with little experience outside of classroom assignments, Andrew Kramer became one of my best friends.

Andrew Kramer is the genius behind videocopilot.net. To date, Video Copilot has over 120 tutorials which are both infinitely entertaining and helpful to a motion graphics designer or video compositer. Wait. You never imagined you could be a special effects artist? Think again.

If you get to know Andrew and his website, you are going to start noticing some familiar things.

"Hey...Wasn't that explosion in a Nike commercial?" or "Those titles look just like the opening sequence to the latest Star Trek movie..." Yep. That's right. Video Copilot reaches pretty far. And Kramer takes the simple screen capture and voiceover to a new level.

Now, these tutorials are not for the faint of heart.

Target Audience: Intermediate and Advanced Adobe After Effects (and other compositing/effects programs) users who are comfortable with the interface and tools. No idea what After Effects is? Video Copilot has provided a FREE basic training series to get you up to speed with what you need to know to master some of the tasks in these tutorials (Kramer, 2007).

Strengths:
  • Starting with the end in mind: you see an example of the finished product before the tutorial begins.
  • Step-by-step instructions with visual and auditory cues.
  • Entertaining anecdotes.
  • Examples of the right and wrong ways to accomplish a task.
  • Project files are included with many tutorials so the viewer can work alongside.
  • Comments are enabled on each tutorial to allow viewer feedback.
Weaknesses:
  • Assuming availability of non-standard elements. Some of the tutorials rely on third-party plugins that do not come standard with the software.

Xmarks reports Video Copilot as 5/5 stars, ranked #1 in AE, After Effects, and After Effect Tutorials (Xmarks, 2011). I'd add my 5 star rating right along with the rest.

What does this mean for educators? If you want to know how to do something, you have at your fingertips the means to learn how to do it. Specifically with Video Copilot, you can learn how to make professional-looking animated text or record a Google Earth-type zoom without having to pay for Google Earth Pro, as well as 120 other possibilities. Why would you need to know how to do any of that? For your website, developing curricula, a presentation, a unit, a lesson...

What does this mean for students? See above. Knowledge at your fingertips. Infinite possibilities.

Sky's the limit.

"Earth Zoom" (Kramer, 2007)



Kramer, A. (Producer). (2007). Earth zoom. [Web Video]. Retrieved from http://www.videocopilot.net/tutorials/earth_zoom/

Kramer, A. (2007, September 24). [Web log message]. Retrieved from http://www.videocopilot.net/blog/2007/09/basic-training/

Xmarks. (2011). Xmarks reviews. Retrieved from http://www.xmarks.com/site/www.videocopilot.net/tutorials

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