Until now, when it came to affordable programs for editing, organising and
sharing your files,
Roxio
Creator and
Nero
have been the two main choices. Now Corel has thrown its hat into the ring with
Digital Media Studio 2010.
The suite comprises four separate applications: Paintshop Photo, Videostudio,
DVD Factory and WinDVD. From the outset, it's clear that Corel hasn't just
cobbled together a group of existing applications: each one has the same simple
and intuitive design. Throughout the editing applications, Corel makes it easy
to share your music, video and pictures, either over email or by directly
uploading them to
Facebook,
Flickr
or
Youtube.
Paintshop Photo is the image editor, and as with the other programs in the
collection, when it is loaded for the first time it scours the computer’s
hard
disk for suitable media and adds it to the library. Tags can be applied to
help organise photos, and the
thumbnail
view can be smoothly resized using a slider bar. Double-click a photo and you're
taken to the Express Edit screen in which a variety of effects can be applied,
including a Makeover tool that lets the user airbrush those faces that aren’t
quite perfect. Collages and impressive-looking photo books can also be put
together.
As for moving images, the Videostudio application is the thing to use. Videos
can be quickly split or trimmed, while a selection of effects can also be
applied. Alternatively, provide it with a set of clips and it's able to
automatically cobble them together to create a video complete with menus and a
soundtrack.
DVD Factory looks after video conversion and the
burning
of files to CD or DVD. Advanced options include the ability to burn discs in
high definition using the
AVCHD
format, as well as converting video for iPods and mobile phones. However, it
can't burn files to Blu-ray discs.
WinDVD is the final part, providing video playback. It offers several
enhancements, including the rather interesting Time Stretch to speed up video
without the audio getting high-pitched – the idea being that you can watch to
the end of a film even if you're running out of time.
The suite also features support for Windows 7's new touch capabilities,
allowing users to browse and manipulate media using finger gestures. However,
you will need a touch-screen computer to take advantage of this.
Corel Digital Studio 2010 doesn't offer anything particularly advanced, nor
does it bring many new features. And given the similarity of each part it's a
surprise that Corel didn’t bundle everything into a single application. Where it
excels is in providing basic image, video and disc burning tools that are very
easy to use.
Rival products might be cheaper and have more features, but Corel Digital
Suite is intuitive and better suited to beginners.
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