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Media Type:
Sound
Common File Formats:
.WAV, .MID, .AU
Description:
Sound complements your titles with music, sound
effects and voiceovers that create a mood, add
emphasis, communicate ideas, or signal
interactivity.
Sound
• How to make sounds
• How to record and edit sounds
• How to incorporate sounds into your
work
Sound Types in Multimedia
1) Narration
2) Sound effect
3) Music
1) Narration
• Voice recording for specific use at a
predetermined time or “on demand” in an
interactive environment.
• Says what you want to say and when you
want to say it
• Example: demonstrating a process or
procedure, it can be repeated, on demand,
at the user’s discretion.
Narration
• Developer creates the narrative sound track
himself/herself or has it done by an outside
source.
• Some of the considerations are:
– Can I do it myself?
– Is my voice quality sufficient for the job?
– Do I have the equipment to do the
recording?
– If I use an outside source, where do I go?
– Does my project have the funds to pay for
outside sources?
2) Sound Effects
• Most commonly used sound format in the
development of multimedia productions
• Very effective at getting a point across and
grabbing the attention of an audience
• One of the easiest formats to obtain from
companies specialize in producing sound
effects for distribution
– e.g CD-ROM
– formats include .aif, .wav, and others, and
are compatible with Macintosh and Windows
applications
3) Music
• Obtained through various clip media
vendors
• To support any musical taste and to
accompany any style graphic or video
• Two types :
– Basic Sound(Digital audio)
– Advance Sound (MIDI)
MIDI
• Musical Instrument Digital Interface
• developed in early 1980s for electronic musical
instruments and computers.
• Allows music and sound synthesizers from
different manufacturers to communicate each
other by sending messaged along cables
connected to the devices
• Protocol for passing detailed descriptions of a
musical score, such as notes, sequences of
notes, and what instrument will play these
notes
MIDI
• Not digitized sound; it is a shorthand
representation of music stored in numeric
form
• A score that depends on the capabilities of
your sound system, the other on the quality
of your musical instruments and the
capabilities of your sound system
• MIDI files are much more compact than
digital audio files - independent of playback
quality
MIDI
• MIDI files are small, they don’t take much
RAM, disk space,and CPU resources
• May sound better than digital audio files if
MIDI sound source is of high quality
• Can change the length of a MIDI file(by
varying its tempo)without changing the
pitch of the music or degrading the audio
quality
• Completely editable- right down to the level
of an individual note
MIDI
• MIDI files are small, they don’t take much
RAM, disk space,and CPU resources
• May sound better than digital audio files if
MIDI sound source is of high quality
• Can change the length of a MIDI file(by
varying its tempo)without changing the pitch
of the music or degrading the audio quality
• Completely editable- right down to the level
of an individual note
• Require a modicum of familiarity with musical
scores, as well as audio production
Choosing between MIDI and Digital Audio
In general, use MIDI data in the following:
• Digital audio won’t work because you don’t
have enough RAM, hard disk space, or CPU
processing power
• You have a high quality sound source
• You have complete control over the
playback hardware
• You don’t need spoken dialog
Choosing between MIDI and Digital Audio
In general, use digital audio in the following:
• You don’t have complete control over the
playback hardware
• You have the computing resources to
handle digital files
• You need spoken dialog
Making MIDI audio
• Midisoft Studio for Windows to make
MIDI scores
• Sound synthesizer(typically built into
the sound boards on PCs)
• A MIDI Keyboard - useful to simplify
creation of musical scores
• File formats: .mid
Digital Audio
• Digitize sound from:
– microphone
– synthesizer
– existing tape recordings
– live radio and television broadcasts
– popular CDs
– records
Digital Audio
• Digitize sound is sampled sound
• Three sampling frequencies most often used
in multimedia are:
– CD-quality 44.1KHz
– 22.05 KHz
– 11.025 KHz
• Sample sizes are either 8 bits or 16 bits
• The larger the sample size, the better the
data describes the recorded sound
Preparing digital audio files:
• Balancing the need for sound quality
with your available RAM and hard disk
resources
• Setting proper recording levels to get
a good, clean recording
File Size versus Quality
• For a monophonic recording:
– sampling rate * duration of recordings in
seconds * (bit resolution/8) * 1
• For a stereo recording:
– sampling rate * duration of recordings in
seconds * (bit resolution/8) * 2
• Example: For a 10-second recording at
22.05KHz, 8-bit resolution would be:
– 22050 * 10 * 8/8 * 1 = 220,500 bytes
Evaluating sound quality
Sampling Frequency Rate
8 bits
11.025kHz
22.05 kHz 44.1 kHz
Lowest
quality
Good
quality
16 bits Acceptabl Very
e quality good
quality
Very
good
quality
Highest
quality
Editing Digital Recordings
• Trimming
• Splicing and Assembly
• Volume adjustments
• Format conversion
• Resampling or downsampling
• Fade-ins and Fade-outs
• Equalization
• Time Stretching
• Digital Signal Processing (DSP): process signal
with effects such as reverberation, multitab
delay, chorus, flange, and other special effects
Audio File Formats
• A sound’s file format is simply a recognized
methodology for organizing the digitized
sound’s data bits and bytes into a data file
• On the Macintosh, digitized sounds may be
stored as data files , .AIF or .SDII
• On the Windows, .WAV
• On the Internet,
Adding Sound to your Multimedia Project
1. Decide what kind of sound is needed(such as
background music, special sound effects, and
spoken dialog). Fit the sound cues into your
storyboard.
2. Decide where and when you want to use either
digital audio or MIDI data.
3. Acquire source material by creating it from
scratch or purchasing it.
4. Edit the sounds to fit your project.
5. Test the sounds to be sure they are timed
properly with the project’s images. This may
involve repeating steps 1 through 4 until
everything is in synch.
Media Type:
Video
Common File Formats:
.AVI, .MPG
Description:
Full-motion video offers a level of authenticity
similar to television or movies. With video, you
can show tasks and events that words and
graphics are inadequate to explain. And video
quickly and effectively reaches a busy audience.
Uses of VIDEO
• Common practice to have a video clip or
two in a presentation
• Fastest way to deliver a message across
an audience
• Captivate our attention and it also helps
us retain more information in our memory
than with just plain text and graphics
• We, are after all, audio-visual creatures
What is VIDEO?
• A series of frames containing pictures and
sound played back at a fast rate.
• Single frame is a picture with a specific
action.
• Several frames of the same picture but
with slight variation in the action, are
grouped together and played back within a
specific time, the picture will give an
impression of movement.
What is VIDEO?
• Measured in frames per second or fps.
• US, video is played back at 30 fps which is
set up by their National Television
Standards Committee , NTSC.
• UK, Australia and most part of Asia uses
PAL (Phase Alternation Line) , 25 fps for
video and television playback.
• Multi-systems for television sets and video
cassette recorders
TWO Types of VIDEO
• ANALOGUE VIDEO: signal having a
continuous set of values
• DIGITAL VIDEO: set of discrete
values
Differences between Analogue and Digital
• Analogue picture can be enlarged to
any size without loss of quality of the
image.
• Digital picture which is made of pixels
of picture element, loses quality when
it is enlarged - the total image to be
less sharp.
ANALOGUE TO DIGITAL
• Digitizing means converting the video signal to
digital information
• To digitize video on your desktop PC:
– ANALOGUE source
• VCR, Laser discs players, Camcorder
– FAST CPU and a lot of memory(RAM)
• faster the processor, the better the digital
video will be, minimum 486 66MHz
• more memory, the easier it is to capture
and digitize video, minimum 32MBs to
64MBS or more
ANALOGUE TO DIGITAL
• HARDDRIVE
– Video files consumes a lot of storage space
– fast
• VIDEO CAPTURE BOARD
– connects the analogue source to your
computer
– captures the video signals from the source
and converts the analogue video to digital
video which uses CODEC to digitize the
video
– E.g. CREATIVE Lab’s Video Blaster
VIDEO FILE FORMAT
• WINDOWS
– .AVI (Audio Video Interleave)
– combines both audio and video data
Digital Video Size
• Video files are huge because it contain both
video and audio data
• To calculate the size of a video, several
factors need to be considered:
– SCREEN SIZE: Larger the screen size,
the larger the video file will be. Full
screen video is 640 x 480 in size- number
of pixels on screen.
• Use one quarter screen which is 320 x
240 or one sixteenth of a screen, 160 x
120 pixels
Digital Video Size
• COLOUR: Primary Colors, RGB
– Computer, each color take up 8-bits of
space per pixel.
– Realistic Color digital video, each pixel in a
computer will comprise of 24-bit
color(true color)
• FRAME RATE: Real time video is played at
25fps using PAL and 30fps using NTSC
– Digital video clips are played at 15fps
– more frame rates used per second, larger
the video file will be.
Digital Video Size
• SOUND AND TIME:
– sound adds storage space to the file;
higher quality , the more space it takes up
– longer the video clip, the larger file size
CODEC
• Compressor/decompressor
• a software device to compress and
decompress data(video)
• PC, most widely used CODECS:
– Cinepack and Indeo => .avi
– Apple Quicktime => .mov
– MPEG => .mpg
VIDEO EDITING SOFTWARE
• Allows you to edit and add effects and
enhancement to your digital video clip
• ADOBE PREMIERE
• ASSYMETRIX DVP
• ADOBE AFTER EFFCETS
Media Type:
Graphics
Common File Formats:
.DIB, .BMP, .WMF, .TIF
Description:
Graphics shape the design of your title,
adding visual appeal and expressing concepts
that text alone cannot easily communicate.
You can scan graphics or create them on a
computer, then save them in the file format
you need
Form of Images
• Photograph
• interactive button
• computer illustration or
• video footage from your camcoder
Uses of Visual Graphics
• To create dazzling background
textures
• Visualization of information and data,
such as spreadsheet data
• Enhance a textual point on the screen,
or making a button visually simulating
through picture icons
Types of Graphics or Digital Image
• Vector graphics
• Bitmapped graphics
Vector graphics
• Describes a shape or image using lines and
curves and the image is stored as a series
of co-ordinates
• consists of line drawings such as lines,
rectangles, ellipses, arcs, spline curves
• Do not look like photographs
• CorelDraw!, Macromedia Freehand and
Adobe Illustartor
Examples of Vector Graphics:
Bitmapped graphics
• Images made up of pixels, tiny dots on
your screen or printer, each of which
you can paint a particular color
• Images that come from a scanner, a
photograph or images captured from a
video camcorder or TV
• Picture + Element
Bitmapped graphics
• Pixels can be either on or off (the 1-bit
bitmap, monochrome black and white) or
• Can represent varying shades of color
• 4-bit => 16 colors
• 8-bit => 256 colors
• 16-bit => 65,356 colors
• 24-bit => millions of colors
Examples of Bitmapped Graphics
Different ways to make a bitmap
• Make a bitmap from scratch with a
paint program
• Grab a bitmap from an active
computer screen with a screen
capture program, and then paste it
into a paint program or your
application
• Capture a bitmap from a photo,
artwork using a scanner
Bitmapped graphics software
• Adobe Photoshop
• Windows Paintbrush
• Fractal Design Painter
• PaintShop Pro
Digital Image File Formats
• *.BMP => Windows Bitmap
• *.GIF => Graphics Interchange Format. A
CompuServe Information Service Format
used to compressed bitmapped images
• *.JPG =>Joint Photographic Experts
Group(JPEG). Used by various drawing
program and the Internet because it
compresses bitmapped images into a smaller
size
Digital Image File Formats
• *.TIF => Tagged Image File Format.
Introduced by Aldus and has many
file versions. File sizes also tend to
be rather large
Acquiring Graphics
• Creating digital images in-house through
the use of special graphics package
• hiring graphic houses/designers
• purchasing digital clipart
• scanning photographs
• taking digital photos with a digital camera
Calculating File Size for an Image
• Height of the graphics (the number of
pixels displayed horizontally)
• Width of the graphics (the number of
pixels displayed vertically)
• Color depth or bit depth (the number
of bits of color information in each
pixel)
Calculating File Size for an Image
• Image size(in bytes) =
(Height x Width x Color Depth) /8
Features of Image Editing Tools
• Multiple windows, which provide views of
more than one image at a time
• Conversion of major image data types and
industry standard file formats
• Direct inputs of images from scanner and
video sources
• Employment of a virtual memory scheme
that uses hard disk space as RAM for
images that require large amounts of
memory
Features of Image Editing Tools
• Capable selection tools, such as rectangles,
lassos, and magic wands, to select portions of
a bitmap
• Image and balance controls for brightness,
contrast, and control balance
• Good masking features
• Multiple undo and restore features
• Anti-aliasing capability, and sharpening and
smoothing controls
• Color-mapping controls for precise
adjustment of color balance
Features of Image Editing Tools
• Tools for retouching, blurring, sharpening,
lightening, darkening, smudging, and tinting
• Geometric transformations such as flip, skew,
rotate, and distort, and perspective changes
• Ability to resample and resize an image
• 24-bit color, 8- or 4-bit indexed color, 8-bit
gray scale, black and white,and customizable
color palettes
• Ability to create images from scratch, using line,
rectangle, square, circle, ellipse, polygon,
airbrush etc
Features of Image Editing Tools
• Multiple typefaces, styles, and sizes, and
type manipulation and masking routines
• Filters for special effects, such as
crystallize, dry brush, emboss, facet etc
• Ability to design in layers that can be
combined, hidden, and reordered.
Media Type:
Text
Common File Formats:
.TXT, .RTF, .DOC
Description:
Text often shapes the content of a multimedia
title, delivering key information and helping
people navigate among topics. As a rule, keep
text brief and select a font that is easy to
read onscreen.
Media Type:
Animation
Common File Formats:
.FLC, .FLI
Description:
Animation enhances a project by activating
graphics - charts that grow, mechanical objects
that function - to illustrate your point. You can
also use animated effects, such as text or logos
flying onto the screen.