-In the upper right hand corner of the main window, there is a toggle button to easily switch back and forth when you have a proxied file on the timeline. The icon is to the left of the FF icon. It will have the letter “P” as the icon for Proxy or if \textit{Using Scaler}, the letter “S”. \quad \includegraphics[height=\baselineskip]{images/proxy-01.png} \quad This quick switch is especially useful when editing and you need to see a better image temporarily.
-
-Screencast in figure~\ref{fig:proxy-02} shows the Use scaler checked so you can still use plugins and the original project size is kept. The Scale factor pull-down gives you available size options. Note the new media dimensions shown (partially covered). If the size is an odd number, 1 is added to make the dimensions both even numbers.
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-In the case of the scaler checkbox, it will retain that setting for ease of use.
-
-\begin{figure}[htpb]
- \centering
- \includegraphics[width=0.8\linewidth]{images/proxy-02.png}
- \caption{Proxy settings dialog}
- \label{fig:proxy-02}
-\end{figure}
-
-There is also a convenient \texttt{Beep on done} checkbox included so that you can work on other tasks until there is an audible notify of completion.
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-A good choice for proxy settings with 1080p source video is:
-
-\begin{lstlisting}[language=bash,numbers=none]
-Scale Factor: 1/4
-Use Scaler: unchecked
-File Format: FFMPEG - mpeg
-Video Preset:
-Compression: mpeg.mpeg
-Bitrate: 1800000
-Quality: -1
-Pixels: yuv420p
-\end{lstlisting}
-
-If you get errors for some videos, such as those with strange variable bit rate or some types of files made on a smartphone, a usually reliable alternative is to change the following parameters:
-
-\begin{lstlisting}[language=bash,numbers=none]
-File Format: FFMPEG - mov
-Video Preset:
-Compression: mov.mov
-\end{lstlisting}
-
-Or if you want small files with high image quality, a File Format of \texttt{m2ts} is optimal. For example a 1 GB file can be reduced to 50 MB with scale $\frac{1}{2}$.
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-Checking the \texttt{Auto proxy/scale media loads} results in any additional media loads to be automatically proxy scaled. However, single frame media such as PNG or JPEG \textit{stills}, can not be scaled to \textit{stream} media. If this type of media exists, you should \texttt{use scaler}.
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-If you get error messages when creating proxies, check the Video wrench settings. These usually default to values that are expected to work correctly for the \textit{File Format} and codec you selected but they can be changed and may result in errors. If you get an error message of \textit{check\_frame\_rate failed} followed by \textit{Error making proxy} in the popup Errors window, do just that and check the Frame rate value by going to the Resources window, Media folder, and use the right mouse button for the Info option for that specific media in question. You can change the frame rate in this window to a more codec acceptable value. Different codecs may have different legal values.
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-More specific information on which plugins need to use scaler is provided here next. If the keyframe data uses coordinate data that is absolute, then the scaler should be used. If the data is normalized (like always $0-100\%$) then the proxy can be done without the scaler. The session geometry format, shown in \texttt{Settings $\rightarrow$ Format} as width x height, is changed if the scaler is not used to cause all of the data to be in the reduced format. If this affects the plugin operation, then scaler should be used. Examples of plugins that need the scaler are: Title, AutoScale, Scale, ScaleRatio, and Translate. Most others are safe to use without scaling.