Richard, Although I'm not sure what all is supposed to be functional, I was able to view some golfing videos after browsing around a bit to find where they were located in the program. Also took a snapshot of one and saved it to my desktop. All of the above on a RC running Vista and Firefox.
Pretty nifty concept, but nothing I can use. ;) My only question at this point... where are all of the files located that were downloaded so that I may remove them from my computer? Best regards, David C. >----- Original Message ----- >From: "Richard Miller" <w...@together.net> >To: "How to use Revolution" <use-revolution@lists.runrev.com> >Sent: Wednesday, December 2, 2009 8:37:28 AM GMT -06:00 US/Canada Central >Subject: Swing Browser is in testing > >I have entered the testing phase with my new software based on the >revweb plugin, and would appreciate any and all feedback (negative, >positive, suggestions.... whatever) from anyone who wants to check it over. > >The site is still rough around the edges... plus, I have little in the >way of graphics skills, so it doesn't look as cool or tight as it could. >But functionally, it has all the right pieces. I have about 30 users >testing it now before it goes public... which won't be until a new >version of the plugin is released. I've had to work around the ongoing >revweb problems regarding cursors (no busy, draw or hand cursor), the >lack of a dependable Answer dialog box, the lack of direct Externals >support, and a few other things. Hopefully, these will all be fixed >soon. Also note it does not seem to run under Windows 7 and IE (not sure >about Firefox). > >The main purposes of this site are as follows: > >1. Allow users to easily import their sports videos into the system, >following which they can review their "motion" frame-by-frame. I've set >the site up generically, so it is as useful to baseball, tennis, etc. as >it is to golf (my original core focus area). The software should handle >most common video formats. It uses ffmpeg to convert any >non-Quicktime-compatible formats to MOV. > >2. Let users compare their motion to professionals (i.e. "model videos" >in the Directory) > >3. Let them easily edit these videos (which are often 20 - 100 mb in >size coming off the camera) so the file size is 1 mb or so, from which >they can then quickly send those videos to anyone else for review (using >just an email address). The receiver views the video in my program. You >can test this function using the Sample Video (in the Directory) under >the Imported Videos section. Click on it, then Edit Video. > >4. Most importantly, allow pro's to do a voice-over analysis (including >lines, circles and polygons) of a swing using the Create Analysis button >in the Compare screen. This analysis can then be quickly sent to others >(typically students) for review through my site. > >5. Make the program easy to use, convenient (since it runs in a >browser... which is where all the action seems to be these days), and >inexpensive ($69). > >6. Make it Windows, Mac and (soon) Linux compatible. > >It's all here: www.swingbrowser.com > >Thanks. >Richard Miller > > >_______________________________________________ >use-revolution mailing list >use-revolution@lists.runrev.com >Please visit this url to subscribe, unsubscribe and manage your subscription >preferences: >http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution _______________________________________________ use-revolution mailing list use-revolution@lists.runrev.com Please visit this url to subscribe, unsubscribe and manage your subscription preferences: http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution