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Editing Digital Video with Windows Live Movie Maker (part 2) - Understanding the Movie Maker User Interface

1/27/2014 3:21:00 AM

2. Understanding the Movie Maker User Interface

Windows Live Movie Maker is divided into three basic areas from top to bottom: the new ribbon interface at the top, which replaces the old menu and toolbar; the Preview pane on the left, and the Contents pane on the right. As shown in Figure 3, these areas are clearly delineated.

This is the first version of Windows Live Movie Maker to utilize a ribbon interface, but you're probably familiar with it from newer versions of Microsoft Office and, of course, the new Paint and WordPad versions that are included in Windows 7. Basically, it combines the functions that used to appear in separate menus and toolbars, and presents them in a more graphical and discoverable way. The Movie Maker ribbon is quite simple, especially compared to the complex ribbons you sometimes see in Office. It features just three tabs: Home, Visual Effects, and Edit. We'll examine these as appropriate going forward.

Another change related to the ribbon is the new truncated File menu that appears if you click the Application menu button—the dark-blue box in the upper-left corner of the application window. This displays Windows Live Movie Maker's only true menu, as shown in Figure 4, though to be fair there's nothing in there that can't be accessed otherwise. (Even the Options dialog is empty at this point, though presumably Microsoft has big plans for future versions.)

Figure 3. Windows Live Movie Maker takes digital media content in and spits out finished video after a bit of fine-tuning.

Figure 4. As with other ribbon-based applications, Windows Live Movie Maker does include a vestigial application menu.

Previous versions of Movie Maker offered a Tasks pane for stepping through the tasks needed to bring a custom video production to life. However, with the single-minded nature of Windows Live Movie Maker comes a much simpler way to work. You simply import content, position that content in the order in which you want it to appear, optionally apply a limited range of visual effects and titles, and then output your creation to disk and, usually, a Web-based video sharing site like MSN Soapbox or YouTube.

Note that the Preview pane is resizable, so you can alternatively increase the size of the video output and decrease the size of the Contents pane, and vice versa, as needed. This is shown in Figure 5.

Figure 5. Give yourself space where you need it most
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