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Liquidians - Don't
miss these tutorials -
NEW - Media Composer 5 - Getting Started
&
Intro to Smart Tool and others on the
Tutorial Page |
A quick observation:
If you loved
Liquid's media management, you probably won't like MC's - even though they
are not that different. Both use BINS, but you can not
tell MC to use a certain folder or directory for media - it always
will use \Avid MediaFiles\MXF to place EVERYTHING - rendered files,
media files, etc.So instead of going to the
render folder and deleting out the projects rendered files - you
have to use MC's Media Manager
And when you think you should be able to right
click on a bin and choose "rename" or "delete" - you won't find
those standard and expected options. Not that you can't rename
them or delete them - focus on the bin and hit the delete key - or
retype the name.
And Timeline settings - no chance of using one
setting for one timeline and another setting for a second timeline.
Settings are project oriented - so if you want a
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A Note About QUICKTIME |
You must run the compatible version of Quicktime with MC, You can find the Windows version of QT
7.6.6
here. 7.6.8 is not yet qualified for MC. Refer to this
version matrix.
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Drive setup and
System Recommendations |
MC is still a 32-bit app. Even running in a 64-bit OS,
32-bit apps can only address 4GB's of RAM, regardless of how much is
installed. But, that's still approx twice the RAM that would be available
to MC running in a 32-bit OS. -
BLKDOG
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Tutorials on BINS and
Media Management |
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Avid Media Composer Quick Start - Don't miss these tutorials -
Understanding them up front will sure help in the learning process.
The first 4 tutorials of Module 1 will help in understanding MC
Media Management. |
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Opening a Project and User |
| 2 |
Working in the Project Window |
| 3 |
Organizing a Project |
| **4 |
Working with Bins |
** This is a good one
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| Tutorials |
From Douglas's tutorials
Link12
Very basic look at some Media Management
Link 162 Media Management
- Completely deleting a Project
Link 170 Media Management
- Bins & Clips 1. Sorting Clips
Link 171 Media Management - Bins & Clips 2. Custom
Sorting
Link 172 Media Management - Bins & Clips 3. Dragging
Clips
Link 173 Media Management - Bins & Clips 4. Title Clip
Thumbnails
Link33 Adjusting the thumbnails in bins
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Media Management - Media Creation Tool,
Media Tool and MDV |
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There are three tools to use :
1. Media Creation (tools menu or ctrl + 5 )
2. Media Tool (Tools Menu)
3. MDV
1. Media Creation - to choose the render or
ingest media drives. Settings for Media
Creation only apply to the current Project, unless you add your
customized Media Creation settings to your Site Settings. Then
they'll apply the way you set them each time you start up
2. Media Tool - for deleting a project's media and precomputes
3. MDV -
A
free program for moving media clustered by a specific project at
the folder level
MDV_AVID_20jul08.zip
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Creating a project
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CUSTOMIZED BIN VIEWS:
Larry Rubin:
Open a bin.
Click on the "text" tab at top of bin.
Click on the fast "hamburger" menu and choose "headings..."
(1)
Activate the specific metadata columns you desire (2).
Arrange order of columns by clicking on column name and
dragging sideways.
Click in window at bottom of bin for "save as" (3),
name the view and save it (4).
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Bin Settings. Sveranko
1. Double Clicking on Bin at Settings you open the
Bin Settings which are very useful for many aspects.
2. There you can choose if the clips at a bin will open at a pop up
monitor or will load on preview monitor
3. Or you can enable edit straight from the bin! or enable the Super
Bin which I always use instead of bins
4. You can also decide the auto save time or the items stored on the
Attic folder (4).
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BACKING UP A PROJECT |
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Backup - Using MDV
Before you open MDV make a
folder on your backup drive. (FWIW I make a complete Avid Media
folder structure on the Backup drive for example X:\Aviid
MediaFiles\MXF\1)
Open MDV and select all of the drives
Press Scan
Select (click on) your Project name
All of the files in that project will now appear in the media box
Ctrl A will select all of those files
F5 will COPY those files.
Select the file path to the folder you have just created on your
backup drive.
You now have the originals and a complete backup.
(F6 instead of F5 will MOVE all of the selected files)
FWIW I rename my backup drives "Avid MediaFiles" folder to "ProjectNameDate
Avid Mediafiles". When you need to use this project again deleteing
the "ProjectNameDate" from the folders name will allow you to
instantly start editing from the backup drive.
Depending on the version of MDV you are using, if you right click
on the project name you will get the option to store project.
Selecting this will give you options to save media to separate
folders, maintain path etc. This way you will not need to select all
and copy. It does it all by itself. Works great I use it for
archiving projects completre with media all the time. I think that
option is broke in the latest version, but works in the 1 previous
to that.
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Cleaning up a Project:
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re: Larry Rubin
The following is the process I would use to delete media from a
project when it is done:1) Open Media
Tool and show current project, all drives, masterclips, pre-compute
media and media files.
2) Select all of the displayed clips and pre-computes
3) Delete the selected items
All of the media captured, imported, and rendered
is now gone from the system for that specific project.
And let me stress very strongly at this point,
that even though the media tool permits you to work in an "all
projects" mode, DON'T DO IT!
After deleting the media as prescribed above, back
up the specific project folder inside the "Avid Projects" master
folder, if you so desire, and then delete. You can also delete a
project from the select project window. Find the matching folder in
the Avid Attic folder and delete that as well.
You're done. That project and all of it's media
has been completely deleted from your system. Keep in mind that if
you had "borrowed" any media from that project to use in another
project via the "open bins" command, that's gone now, too. To avoid
this, use the consolidate function.
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Kenton.VanNatten - I just finished a project for Boston University
yesterday, so this is what I'll do about 8 weeks after after I
deliver it.
I save all asset files such as any files supplied to me by the
client like photos or music or whatever. I also save Photoshop
files/After Effects projects and rendered Comps, my DVDStudioPro
project and the VideoTS folders and pretty much anything that I
might need in order to re-create the job if they come back and need
a revision or re-purposing.
I also save the Avid Project Folder (with all of the Bins etc)
Once all of these elements are saved, Consolidate the final sequence
to a drive that I use for archiving my projects. Once everything is
Consolidated, I can then open the Media Tool and feel confident
about deleting anything related to the project that lives on my
original drives.
I would never delete the project because if you need to re-visit
the project for whatever reason all of your work will be gone.
Saving the Project (which includes Bins and ultimately your
Sequences) saves all the metadata for the project and you could then
Batch Capture or Batch Import or whatever to fill in the missing
media and bring the project back to life. If you delete the
project, you'd have to start all over. (Kenton)
DO NOT delete the project from the select project until UNTIL
AFTER you have deleted the associated media files, or you will be
left with dozens, hundreds, or thousands of orphaned media files and
precomputes floating around on your media drive. When you want to
move media clustered by a specific project at the folder level, use
MDV. For
deleting a project's media and precomputes, use the built in
Avid media tool. That's what it's there for. (Larry
Rubin)
AVID MEDIA TOOL - tutorial Lynda Series - 20 seconds (need
to buy if you want) |
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MOVING A PROJECT AND ONLY IT'S MEDIA TO ANOTHER
AVID PLATFORM: |
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As many of you know by now, Avid creates associated
media files for each pointer clip you have in your project and
places them in a folder named "Avid MediaFiles" for MXF media, and
an "OMFI MediaFiles" folder if you have OMFI media. Copying and
moving a project folder is easy, but moving ONLY the associated
files for that particular project is a bit more problematic.
For all of it's absolutely superior scheme for media management,
Media Composer has one serious deficiency in that regard - the
inability to cluster media by project at the folder level. But there
is a free down-loadable program known as
MDV which will
allow you to do exactly that, and many users have found to be an
invaluable additional tool. Though the website is primarily in
Russian, all the necessary download links and information is in
English
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I am just learning Avid Media composer and now I
have too many unneeded MXF files in my Avid Mediafiles folder and I
need more drive space. I have a couple projects I would like to keep
and several I want to trash, but all have been dumping to the same
folder and many are named Untitled Sequence. What is the best way to
make sure I only trash the files I want to trash and keep the ones I
need. Also some hints on a better way to setup future projects so
each project has the Avid Mediafiles sub folders setup for the
specific project folder! Use the media tool. Select current
project and then high light Masterclips. All the maasterclips for
the current project will be displayed. Next, highlight your
sequence and choose select media relatives/ Now all masterclips
used in the sequence will be highlighted. Lastly, go back to the
list of all masterclips shown by the media tool and choose reverse
selection. The masterclips not used in your sequence will now be
highlighted and delete the unused masterclips |
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Deleting a Project -
Tutorial |
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You are finished, made your dvd, have
your output file or whatever, and you want to get rid of the
project. and all of it's associated files.
1. Before you delete your project, have you deleted the
ASSOCIATED MEDIA for that project? It's a separate step, using the
media tool. \
2. (I don't see this one in MC5)
Before deleting project (next step), after using media tool to
delete media, go to bins, click on hamburger and choose "set
bin display", select sources, rendered effects and referenced
clips, there should be no change in bin names displayed.
Delete them to using media tool.
3. Close project, then hit delete key in choose
project screen.
4. To complete your project deletion you should
find the Avid Attic and delete the project from there as well.It is
well worth checking the Attic once a month as it can grow to many
GB's if you let it save its default x number of copies of each bin.
Note from
Andrew Action -
I have never deleted a project file. They are normally less than
10MB's and you never know what the future may bring. Murphies law
states that 2 days after you delete a never to be reused project you
need it. (hope you have not found the Attic yet Douglas
.
With hard drive space now so cheap I very rarely delete the original
capture media either. I use the media tool to delete all of the
precomputes (except for Titles and graphics). Then delete all of the
mixdowns. This usually brings even the most unruley projects down to
a manageable size.
The Free Russian program MDV will search all Avid Media folders and
give you a list of all the Projects it finds whilst showing how much
media is attached to each project. (You can select to search just
MXF or just OMFI folders if you want to archive your media
properly.) Clicking on a Project name will reveal all media files
attached to that Project. These can then be selected and
deleted..... or for me more usefully copied, or moved to a folder of
my choice. (Usually a "projectname" folder that has all the file
based sources (including graphics) in it along with a correctly
setup Avid MediaFiles folder and OMFI MediaFiles folder)
Experience has taught me that having almost instant access to all
the original captured media will often save my bacon or at least
free up some extra time to eat it..
For example Sometime later a project, demo reel etc some needs a
particular shot. the diminishing old grey cells kick into action
and I remember using the shot I want in XXX project. Then simply
bring XXX's media back on line.... (Its already in a proper Avid
media folder structure. see 2 paragraphs above) Open the Bin from
XXX project with the final cut sequences in it. Match frame the
appropriate shot back into the source monitor and you are away..
******
You could also download this program.
It scans your system for Avid projects.Highlight the project you
want to delete and hit delete and it will remove the project, media,
attic, etc. Well, once you get past the confirm delete screen.
www.oceansystems.com/avid/Archiving-Avid-Projects/index.html
Archive-R from Ocean SYstemts - $495 Hands11
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MEDIA FOLDER MANAGEMENT GROUND RULES
and
REBUILDING MEDIA DATABASE FILES: (from Larry
Rubin) |
1) The "Avid MediaFiles" folder (for MXF media) and the "OMFI
MediaFiles" folder (for OMF media) MUST reside at the root level of
the media drive, never inside any other folders or the system will
not find the media.
2) The folder names must always be the factory default names
listed above (minus the quotes) or the system will not find the
media.
3) There can be only one of each folder type
on any given media drive
There are 3 specific instances where a media database rebuild
becomes necessary.
1) When you encounter unexpected "media offline" issues and you
are certain that the associated media files have not
been deleted.
2) You launch the media tool and the resulting bin it creates is
empty, and the project media is still online.
3) You move associated media files and project files to a
different drive on a different Avid platform.
Here is the procedure: Quit the application. Then, from each
numerical folder inside the MXF folder inside the Avid MediaFiles
folder, delete the two files that identify by type as "MSM Media
Database" also identified as "msmFMID.pmr" and "msmMMOB.mdb" . If
you have an OMFI MediaFiles folder, delete the same two files. On
re-launch, the system will detect the missing files and build new
ones at the "Initializing Media Streams Manager" stage. You will see
the system go into a scanning and indexing mode at this point.
I must stress that a media database rebuild should NEVER be
considered regular preventative maintenance. It should ONLY be
performed when encountering the above circumstances.
Larry Rubin
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Offline Files Displayed
in Different Color |
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One additional tip - always set up an "offline" view
for the timeline display, so that any media that is offline will
show up as bright red clips in the timeline. This makes it much
easier to see at a glance whether or not you have media offline in
any given sequence. For more complex and longer sequences, you may
need to expand the timeline a bit to make sure that extremely short
clips that may be offline are visible. - Larry Rubin
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Attic Files -
Good link |
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If you are using Windows XP, the attic folder will
be located in C::\Documents and Settings\All Users\Shared
Documents\Avid editing application. If you are using Windows Vista,
the attic folder will be located in drive:/Users/Public/Public
Documents/Avid editing application. Regardless of what Mac operating
system you are using, the attic folder will be located in Macintosh
HD/Users/Shared/Avid editing application/Avid Attic folder. |
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DISK USAGE (Using for a new
project on Brahims Baklava - baklawa |
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C: Used |
C: FREE |
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D: Used |
D:Free |
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E: Used |
E: Free |
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| 11/14/10 |
at start of new project |
312g |
122g |
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172g |
293g |
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601g |
330g |
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Size :\AvidMediaFile
Folder |
272mb |
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111g |
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14g |
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From MFD Viewer:

0
That totals g
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