Friday, 03 July, 2026г.
russian english deutsch french spanish portuguese czech greek georgian chinese japanese korean indonesian turkish thai uzbek

пример: покупка автомобиля в Запорожье

 

How to Get Pictures from Video

How to Get Pictures from VideoУ вашего броузера проблема в совместимости с HTML5
Great Amazon Must Haves for Digital Photographers: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 6: http://amzn.to/1XhdDsk Professional Cleaning Set for DSLR Cameras: http://amzn.to/1L5NuU1 Think Tank DSLR Battery Holder: http://amzn.to/1IKmh7J Joby GP8-BHEN GorillaPod Focus with Ballhead X bundle: http://amzn.to/1LV3RIK Case Logic SLRC-206 SLR Camera Backpack: http://amzn.to/1fVAyHE Transcend USB 3.0 Super Speed Multi-Card Reader: http://amzn.to/1EzCmSf Watch more Photography Tips & Techniques videos: http://www.howcast.com/videos/410874-How-to-Get-Pictures-from-Video Carrying a camera and a video camera to record those special moments can be cumbersome. Don't worry about taking photographs anymore when you can get stills from video. Step 1: Download a video software Download a free video still extractor program. For Windows users, VLC Media Player supports all video file types. For Mac users, imToo Video to Picture supports all video file types. Step 2: Install software Install the software that you have downloaded and save it in your program files. Step 3: Open video file Open the extractor program and then open the video file that contains the frame that you want a snapshot of. Step 4: Play the video Play the video until you locate the moment in the video that you want to capture and pause the video at that point. Step 5: Select SnapShot from Video menu Select the video from the main menu bar. Then select SnapShot from the drop-down menu. Mac users will use the capture function. Tip If you're using VLC Player, images will automatically be saved in your My Pictures folder. Step 6: Locate image Locate the file and rename it, or move it to another folder to keep track of it. If you're using a Mac, you will need to save from the capture screen, and you can name the file anything you want. Now turn all of your favorite video moments into photos! Did You Know? In 2002, Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones became the first feature film entirely shot using digital technology.
Мой аккаунт