Roxio Videowave 5 Power Edition
> Larger image
Similar articles
ADVERTISEMENT
Reviews Disclaimer
Readers are reminded that the opinions expressed, and the results published in connection with reviews and/or laboratory test reports carried out on computing systems and/or related items are confined to, and representative of, only those goods supplied and should not be construed as a recommendation to purchase.

Roxio Videowave 5 Power Edition

Can this old timer keep up with the newer releases from its competitors?

Best prices: Check prices now  Check prices now
Price: £49.99
Manufacturer: Roxio
Specifications:
Ratings
Overall rating: Overall rating
Rate this product
Verdict
Pros:

Effects and transitions.

Cons:
Interface; DVD is hard work.

Verdict:
Requires more effort than some, but can produce great results.

Ken McMahon, Personal Computer World 06 Feb 2004

ADVERTISEMENT

Videowave 5 was formerly produced by MGI. The company was taken over by Roxio at the beginning of last year, just after version 5 was released. In the early days of digital video, Videowave was groundbreaking, providing that rare combination of ease of use and power features. But successive revisions use bolted on features at the expense of usability and, by comparison with newcomers, such as Windows Movie Maker, it looks decidedly dated.

In contrast to the tabbed workspace approach of Ulead Videostudio 7 and Pinnacle Studio 8, the Videowave workspace is flanked on the lefthand side by a long toolbar. This provides access to Videowave's editing modes which include a cutting room, darkroom, special effects, text animator, video mixer, transitions, audio studio, output, capture, publish to web, scene detector, time warp and DVD author.

A library window displays video content, audio clips, transition and effect presets or other content, depending on the current mode. Mode-specific controls are then provided in a panel at the bottom of the screen. A resizable monitor window occupies the left-hand side of the workspace and, just for a change, the storyboard is ranged across the top.

The capture mode can be set to acquire just the video, audio, or both from a DV camcorder or analogue device or to record music from an audio CD in wav format to use as a soundtrack. Videowave has the most configurable scene detection algorithm of all the applications reviewed here, which can be run during capture, or on imported clips. A separate dialogue box allows you to add scenes manually as a clip is played, or have the software detect scenes on the basis of the brightness of the clip content - radical changes here are determined to be indicative of a scene change. A slider is used to adjust the sensitivity of this mechanism.

Videowave doesn't physically split the clips. Instead it saves just one master clip to the hard drive and creates the scenes by duplicating the clip within the application and adjusting its in and out points. This means that if you want to use these scenes in another application you'll have to find another way to split them. It also means you can't base a DVD menu on scenes.

Applying and editing transitions provides a good illustration of how Videowave can be highly intuitive in some respects and a total pain in others. In most video-editing applications you can drag and drop a transition between two clips on the storyboard, but in Videowave you have to drag it to the small transition box located between the two clips at the bottom of the screen.

Once this is done, adjusting the transition duration is a piece of cake - you just drag the icon with two overlapping filmstrips, or for greater accuracy enter a numeric value.

Although there are only 27 preset effects filters, Videowave successfully combines them with customisation options. In special effects mode the options panel is split into three tabs: start, hold and finish, with a slider used to vary the level of the effect for each section of the clip. This isn't as versatile as true keyframing, but it is simpler to apply and the results are almost as impressive.

The title editor or 'text animator' strikes a similar balance between control and ease of use. The 18 preset text styles can be edited using font, outline, drop shadow, transparency and colour controls. A 3 x 3 grid is used to position the text, and animation presets allow you to produce rolling titles and fly-ins. With only nine to choose from, you may not find exactly what you need, but using the same start, hold and finish pseudo-keyframing for effects you can create your own title animations and these can be saved as custom presets.

DVD authoring is carried out in a separate, loosely integrated application that is launched from the Videowave toolbar and shares the same interface design. This provides everything you need to create DVD menus and add content with chapter points. As it stands, producing a DVD is at least a morning's work, and that's enough to put off most people.

Contact: Roxio +49 7543 939 882
www.roxio.co.uk

System requirements:

  • 500MHz CPU
  • Windows 98SE, 2000,ME or XP
  • 128MB of Ram
  • 110MB hard disk space

See also:

  02 Apr 2004
CyberLink PowerDirector 3A good attempt at making video editing easy but serious editors may find it lacking.  16 Mar 2004
Pinnacle Studio 9A well-priced and powerful program that's perfect for video-editing beginners and enthusiasts alike.  27 Feb 2004
Pure Motion EditStudio 3Is this software worth the price?  06 Feb 2004
Pinnacle InstantCopy 8Has version 8 of Pinnacle's home video-editing suite overcome the instability of earlier versions?  06 Feb 2004

All Video Recording, Editing & Mixing

Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below:

Post this to Delicious del.icio.us    Post this to Digg Digg this    Post this to reddit reddit!

Permalink for this story

R E A D E R   R E V I E W S
M A R K E T P L A C E
Sponsored links