lol, yer a sensitive feller... relax mang
You have more restraint than I do. I would've shot it if it didn't go down after a good kick or two
The Wacom tablet has been an absolute joy for me, for the way I work and the way I think in the edit suite.
I fell in love with the concept with Quantel Editbox (this was 2001/2002) and added one to my FCP2 system. I’ve never looked back.
I have one. I never got the hang of it. It sits there collecting dust. I look at it whenever I'm tempted to buy new gadgets. It's saved me so much money over the years
Unfortunately I was recruited into another industry before those years, so I missed that part of history.
I have one. I never got the hang of it. It sits there collecting dust. I look at it whenever I'm tempted to buy new gadgets. It's saved me so much money over the years![]()
I started on those old U-matics. Linear editing brings back memories...
Wow, showing your age.
I'm no spring chicken myself. I remember 8, 16 and 24 track reel to reel analog audio tape. I remember rearranging songs via razor blade. Then in the 80's striping one track with SMPTE to sync with sequencers. Adjusting to mixing to DAT (Digital Audio Tape).
What I miss about the old analog days is the warmth of the sound.
It's the artist, not the brush that counts. Knowing what button to push is worthless without practicing the theories of editing regardless of software.
Just edit. Little things like devices don't make anyone a better editor.