Coarse Editing; Time Gap; Viewing Many Clips At Once; Viewing Two Instances Of The Same Clip - Honeywell Rapid Eye Operator's Manual

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Clips and Stills

Coarse Editing

Time Gap

Viewing Many Clips at Once

Viewing Two Instances of the Same Clip

102
Comparing Events by Making a Clip with a Jump
While making a clip from recorded video and after clicking
have the option of using the Go to command (
option is useful for comparing two events within the same clip.
Jumps into the Future or the Past
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 skips the gap and shows the
next image. If you suspect there are gaps in a clip, check the date and time of the video.
Another way to compare video is to play two or more clips. To highlight a portion of a clip,
you can view a copy that is slightly out of sequence or pause one copy while the other
continues.
1.
View a clip (as explained in
2.
Drag the tear-away player from the session pane (see
3.
Repeat steps 1 and 2, as needed.
Using Microsoft Windows' Explorer, duplicate the *.rem file in its folder. To do so,
1.
use Windows explorer to locate the file and to make a copy of it in the same directory.
Windows makes a copy of a file and names it copy [of filename] by default. You
have the option of renaming the copied file as you see fit.
2.
Play the original clip.
3.
Drag the tear-away player from the session pane.
4.
Play the copy of the clip. Each clip is in its own session, making it easy to pause one
clip at a time (for example, before a theft), and then to pause the other clip at another
point of interest, for the sake of comparison (for example, during and after a theft).
) to jump to a past or future time. This
Viewing a Clip
on page 101).
on the Playback toolbar, you
Figure 2-3
on
page
31).

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