How to map my mobile as a network drive manually?

After you turned on “WiFi+Transfer*” on your mobile device, you are able to map this mobile device as a network drive on your computer.
You can map network drive manually by following these steps:
1. Keep WiFi+Transfer turned on
2. Open Windows Explorer at your PC. Go to ‘Network ‘ and pop-up right-click menu
3. Select ‘ Map Network drive … ‘
web_step 1
4. Enter the URL listed in WiFi+Transfer in the ‘ Map Network Drive ‘ dialog.
enter URL to map
If you want the system to automatically re-connect your phone every time, please enable the ‘ Reconnect at sign-in ‘ option
5. At this moment, you need to allow the access of this PC in the ‘WiFi+Transfer’ of your mobile device
allow access_mobile 6. Once you agree, you will see your mobile device has been successfully mapped.
web_step 3_map

WiFi+Transfer*: WiFi+Transfer iOS v.1.2.5 and higher, WiFi+Transfer Android v. 1.3.6 and higher

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How to map my mobile as a network drive automatically?

After you turned on “WiFi+Transfer*” on your mobile device, you are able to map this mobile device as a network drive on your computer.

If you are reviewing this FAQ at your mobile side and would like to connect your mobile phone to your PC now, you can switch on WiFi+Transfer and go to your PC. Open file explorer, go to Network > Other Devices.
network_other devices

Double click the device, a web page will be opened:
open web page

Now you can map network drive automatically by following these steps:

1. Download the BAT file and save it to local.

  • This BAT file is created by Nero AG.
  • It will check and update your system limitation for file transferring and also help to map your device as a network drive automatically.
  • It is safe to use.

Based on your system security settings, you may get below system messages. Please select ‘Keep’ or ‘Save’/’Run’.
hame computer_keephame computer_keep_IE

2. Run this BAT file.
3. Based on your system security settings, you may get a dialog which told you ‘SmartScreen can’t be reached right now’. Please click ‘Run’.
blue screen_BAT
4. You will get two system windows. They will check your system maximum allowed file size and map your mobile device as network drive.
verify system campibility

5. After the window at top is closed, please press any key to continue
press any key to continue

6. PC will try to access your mobile and map it as network drive. At your mobile side, please allow the access.

How to map my mobile as a network drive automatically

7. After you allowed the access, you will see your mobile at Windows Explorer.
web_step 3_map

 

WiFi+Transfer*: WiFi+Transfer iOS v.1.2.5 and higher, WiFi+Transfer Android v. 1.3.6 and higher

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Best Practice: Multi-Cam Editing with Nero Video

Series of five video tutorials showing you how to edit footage from a stage performance shot with four cameras which were recording continuously.

Access the playlist with the five tutorials as summarized below here:

Part 1: Stage Recording, Importing & Arranging Camera Sources
Introduces the background scenario of the recorded footage, shows you how to import and pre-trim the sources, and how to arrange the four camera sources in a multi tracks timeline based on shot priorities

Part 2: Match AV-Sync between Camera Sources
Shows you how to match AV-sync and have lip sync between the camera sources in four tracks.

Part 3: Match Color & Lighting between different Camera Sources
Shows you how to match color and lighting between the four camera source tracks.

Part 4: Use Master Audio, Intercut Scenes, Add Global Effects
Shows you how to use a master audio track, intercut scenes between the four camera source tracks, and how to add titles and global effects.

Part 5: Optimize Audio, Export Video, Watch Sample
The final part shows you how to optimize your master audio, how to export video for sharing to YouTube in good quality, and gives some tips for multi-cam live recording. Finally you will see the video of a stage performance of PopJazzChor Wiesbaden.

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How can I drag a sequence of clips in one track as a whole and this way synchronize edit points in Nero Video within two tracks ?

In Nero Video ‘Advanced Editing’ there are different tools available that will help you multi-selecting clips in one or more tracks, so that you can drag them to the desired position in the timeline.

Such tools can be accessed via the list of selecting/trimming tools at the right hand side of the timeline. Inside of the tool box just click on the little arrow bottom left of the box.

2. select track tool

Marquee Tool

The ‘Marquee Tool’ allows you to draw a selection mark around clip sequences in one or more tracks of the timeline so that you can drag sequences of clips without losing your already made edits inside of the selection. This tool is pre-selected in the tool box.

1. click on the ‘Marquee Tool’
2. mark the clips that you want to move
3. select the ‘Standard Tool’ again
4. drag the sequence of clips to the wanted position

1. marquee tool

2. select & move

Select Track Tools

There are also more selective track selection tools associated to one track only, so that you can drag sequences of clips without losing your already made edits inside of the track. To access the options click on the small triangle located in the tool box bottom left.

  • mark all clips in the given track
  • mark only those clips located right of the selected clip
  • mark only those clips located left of the selected clip

Click on one of the tools and follow steps 2-4 as already described under ‘Marquee Tool’.

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DIGITAL LIFE MADE EASY (5) – How much Performance does my PC need for Video Editing?

Our digital life should make many things easier. In reality, however, this means that it will only really become easier if you understand the basic concepts behind the digital world.

In this blog, we will look at the question: How much performance does my PC need for video editing?

As there are many different components involved in the editing process, this is not an easy question, indeed. Hard disk speed, RAM, CPU, graphics card and more influence it. Last but not least, source formats, the complexity of the video project, and the desired output format also play an important role.

Basically, one should ask oneself which material one wants to use to create which projects in order to approach the question of the performance of one’s own PC.

Full HD Video (AVC H.264) does not place extraordinary demands on the performance of a current PC, as long as you only work with a few tracks and few effects and do not create projects that last for hours. But be careful: it’s the details that matter. The format of the source video (bitrate, frame rate) can make the difference.

Basically, the higher the bit rate, the higher the frame rate, the more compressed the video codec and the more tracks you use, the higher the performance requirements will be. A PC configuration with an Intel Core i5 from the 6th generation (or comparable AMD CPU) and 4 GB RAM should be the minimum. For large projects and complex formats, more RAM (8 GB or 16 GB) and a stronger CPU are recommended.

The data throughput of the hard disk on which the program runs and on which the data is stored is also important. Many notebooks without an SSD hard disk have relatively slow hard disks with 5400 rpm. This can become a bottleneck. In case of doubt, the upgrade via SSD can help. With the graphics card, you should make sure that it is capable of hardware-based encoding and therefore renders a good 5x faster than with software-based rendering (Intel Quick Sync Video, Nvidia Cuda/NVENC, AMD App Accleration).

With 4K Video (AVC H.264) you already reach the limits of many systems, even if you only work with a few tracks. 4K Video has a resolution four times higher than Full HD and a higher data rate. Here you should invest in a powerful system: SSD at least as program partition, fast hard disk for the data, CPU from Core i7 upwards and 16 GB RAM. Hardware-based rendering of the graphics card is also a must.

HEVC video is already supported in the last generations of the iPhone, while it is only slowly making its way into dedicated photo/video cameras. HEVC is a very powerful but also highly complex compression format.  HEVC (H.265) requires only half the storage space of AVC and can simultaneously produce higher quality video signals than AVC. As a rule of thumb, take the 4K AVC system performance as the basis for HEVC Full HD and upgrade to 4K HEVC again. For HEVC 4K, the fastest is just good enough.

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