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Offline editing is the film and television production process in which raw footage is copied and edited, without affecting the camera original film or tape. Television ( TV) is a widely used Telecommunication medium for sending ( Broadcasting) and receiving moving Images, either monochromatic In Film and Video, footage is the raw unedited material as it had been originally recorded by video Camera, which usually must be edited to Once a programme has been completed in offline, the original media will be conformed, or on-lined, in the online editing stage. Online editing is generally the final stage of video editing When the offline edit is complete the pictures are re-assembled at full or 'online' resolution Offline editing is often considered the most creative stage of the post-production process. See also Filmmaking Post-production occurs in the making of motion pictures, television programs, Videos audio recordings

Modern offline editing is conducted in a non-linear editing suite. "NLE" redirects here For the standardized test see National Latin Examination. The digital revolution has made the offline editing process immeasurably quicker, as practitioners moved from time-consuming linear (tape to tape) suites, to computer hardware and software such as Adobe Premiere, Final Cut Pro, Avid, Vegas Video and Lightworks. Adobe Premiere Pro is a Real-time, timeline based Video editing software application Final Cut Pro is a professional Non-linear editing software application developed by Apple Inc Avid Technology Inc ( is an American company specializing in video and audio production technology specifically digital non-linear editing (NLE Sony Vegas is a Non-linear editing system originally published by Sonic Foundry, now owned and run by Sony Creative Software Lightworks (formerly OLE Limited) was founded at the end of the 1989, by Paul Bamborough, Nick Pollock and Neil Harris. Typically, all the original footage (often tens or hundreds of hours) is digitized into the suite at a low resolution. The editor and director are then free to work with all the options to create the final cut.

History

Film editing used an offline approach almost from the beginning. Film editing is an art of storytelling practiced by connecting two or more shots together to form a sequence, and the subsequent connecting of sequences to form an Film editors worked with a workprint of the original film negative to protect the negative from handling damage. A workprint is a rough version of a Motion picture, used by the Film editor (s during the editing process When video recording was first introduced by Ampex in 1956, it could not be physically cut and spliced as simply and cleanly as film negatives could be. Video is the technology of electronically capturing, Recording, processing storing transmitting and reconstructing a sequence of Still images Ampex ( is an American electronics company founded in 1944 by Alexander M One option was to cut the tape with a razor blade. Since there was no visible frame line on the two inch wide tape, a special developing solution was applied to the tape, allowing the editor to view the control track pulse under a microscope, and thus determine where one frame started and the next began. This process was not always exact, and if imperfectly performed would lead to picture breakup when the cut was played. Generally this process was used to assemble scenes together, not for creative editing.

The second option for video editing was to use two tape machines, one playing back the original tapes, and the other recording that playback. The original tapes were manually cued to a few seconds prior to the start of a shot on the player, while the recorder was set to record. Each machine was rolled forward simultaneously, and a punch in recording was made at the appropriate moment. Beyond not being very precise, recorders of this era cost much more than a house, making this process an expensive use of the machines. House generally refers to a Shelter or Building that is a Dwelling or place for Habitation by Human beings. This technique of re-recording from source to edit master came to be known as linear video editing. A source or sender is one of the basic concepts of Communication and Information processing. Linear video editing is the process of selecting arranging and modifying the images and sound recorded on Videotape whether captured by a Video camera, generated

This was the way things were for television shows shot on tape for the first 15 years. Even programs known for their fast pace, such as the American comedy Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In, continued to use the razor blade technique. Here Comes The Judge redirects here for the 1968 song see Shorty Long.

Three developments of the late sixties and early seventies revolutionized video editing, and made it possible for television to have its own version of the film workprint/conform process.

The first was the invention of time code. Whereas film negative had numbers printed optically along the side of the film, so that every frame could be identified exactly, video tape had no such system. Only video, audio, and a control pulse were recorded. Early attempts to rectify this were primitive to say the least. An announcer reciting the seconds was recorded onto an audio channel on the tape. Time code introduced frame precision, by recording a machine readable signal on an audio channel. A time code reader device translated this signal into hours, minutes, seconds and frames, originally displayed on a Nixie tube display, and later with LED readouts. A nixie tube is an electronic device for displaying numerals or other information. This innovation made it possible for the editor to note the exact frames at which to make a cut, and thus be much more precise. He could create a paper edit by writing down the numbers of the first and last frames of each shot, and then arrange them in order on paper prior to the actual edit session with the expensive VTRs.

The second development was cheaper video recorders. Though not suitable for broadcast use directly, these provided a way to make a copy of the master, with its time code visibly inserted into a small box or 'time code window' in the picture. This tape could then be played in an office or at home on a video recorder costing only as much as a used car. The editor would note down the numbers of the shots and decide the order. They might simply write them in a list, or they might dub from one of these small machines to another to create a rough edit, and note the necessary frame numbers by watching this tape.

Though both of these developments helped greatly, effectively creating the offline editing method, they didn't solve the problem of precisely controlling the video recorder for frame accurate editing. That required precise control of the tape transport mechanism, using a dedicated edit controller that could read the time code and perform an edit exactly on cue.

That innovation came about as a result of research conducted by CMX, a joint venture of the CBS and Memorex corporations. CBS Broadcasting Inc ( CBS) is an American radio and Television network. Established in 1961 in Silicon Valley, Memorex is today a Consumer electronics brand of Imation specializing in disk Recordable media (CD & DVD The intent was to create a much less haphazard method of editing video directly that had all of the creative control of traditional film editing. The result, the CMX 600, accomplished this goal with a two part process. Camera master tapes were dubbed as black and white analog video to very large computer memory discs. Black-and-white is a number of Monochrome forms in Visual arts. Analog video is a Video signal transferred by Analog signal. It contains the Luminance (brightness and Chrominance (color of the image which The editor could access any shot exactly, and quickly edit a precise black and white, low quality version of the program. More importantly, re-editing was trivial, as no cuts were actually performed. The shots were simply accessed and played in sequence from the disc in real time. The computer kept track of all the numbers in this offline stage of the process, and when the editor was satisfied, output them as an Edit decision list (EDL). An edit decision list or EDL is a way of representing a film or video edit. This EDL was used in the final stage of the process, the online edit. To make it work, special computer to VTR edit interfaces had to be developed, called I-Squareds. Under the control of a computer reading back the EDL, these I-Squareds shuttled the broadcast quality VTRs exactly to the points necessary to record and edit master with exact edits from the source tapes.

Though recording to computer disc pack and this first attempt at non-linear editing on video was abandoned as too expensive, the rest of the hardware was recycled into the offline/online edit process that remained dominant in television production for the next 20 years or more. "NLE" redirects here For the standardized test see National Latin Examination.

Although tape formats changed from reels to cassettes, and all the equipment rapidly became much cheaper, the basics of the process remained the same. Videotape is a means of recording images and sound onto Magnetic tape as opposed to movie film. An editor would offline on a less expensive, low quality format, before entering the online editing suite with an EDL and master source tapes, to finish the broadcast quality version of the show.

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