Coarse Editing - Honeywell RAPID EYE MULTI-MEDIA Operator's Manual

Rapid eye multi-media units
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Double-clicking several *.rem files causes multiple MultiClip Player sessions to
be opened. To free up Windows resources, remember to close MultiClip Player
sessions when finished.
7.3

Coarse Editing

Comparing events: making a clip with a jump
While making a clip from recorded video: after clicking
have the option of using the Go to command
coarse editing is useful for comparing two events within the same clip.
7.3.1
Time Gap
Jumping into the future
Making a clip of two segments, say from 8:00 AM to 8:05 AM, on two consecutive days,
introduces a gap of 24 hours in the clip. On playback, the clip stops at the point where
the jump occurs, until the time of the next image. Rather than waiting 24 hours through
the gap, use procedure !104 to see the clip in a reasonable amount of time.
! ! ! ! 104 To avoid waiting for a clip to resume playing, when it contains a time gap
Jumping into the past
One way to avoid gaps is to jump back, rather than forward in time. For example: for a
clip of two segments, say from 8:00 AM to 8:05 AM, on two dates, start with the later
date. By doing so, the clip fools playback into believing there is no gap. Since the
second segment is in the past, it is played immediately.
7.3.2
Viewing Many Clips at Once
Another way to compare video is to play two or more clips.
! ! ! ! 105 To compare clips
1.
2.
3.
7–6
When the video reaches the gap and appears paused, click Pause, then click
Play.
View a clip (see 5.2).
Drag the tear-away player from the session pane; to do so, see figure 9 on p. 2–
3.
Repeat steps 1 and 2 as needed.
on the Playback toolbar, you
to jump to a past or future time. This

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