Popcorn Maker helps you easily remix web video, audio and
images into cool mashups that you can embed on other websites. Drag and drop
content from the web, then add your own comments and links ; all within your
browser. Popcorn Maker videos are dynamic, full of links and unique with every
view. Popcorn lets users link social media, news feeds, data visualizations and
other content directly to moving images. The result is a new form of multimedia
storytelling that lives and breathes more like the web itself: interactive,
social, and unique each time.
Mozilla's
Popcorn Maker is an initiative by the Mozilla Foundation to create a software
that uses the Popcorn.js API to add web-rich features to
videos, without having to learn programming. The software can be used by video
creators and editors in so many ways ranging from creating an instructional
video almost from scratch, to editing an existing video to add text,
hyperlinks, annotations and so many other features. This, in turn, can be used
to clarify the video, to add more information, to add nice effects, etc. Popcorn
adds interactivity and context to online video, pulling the rest of the web
right into the action in real time.
On the down side, it doesn’t have an option to create videos from scratch, and hence you cannot upload videos from your computer. There is no option to customize the workspace or at least resize the panels. You also cannot group elements and hence have to apply effects to individual elements. However, connect a video in the web with the content around it, and you get a video that behaves like the web itself, constantly changing and evolving, interactive, and sharable. That is what Mozilla has managed to achieve with the Popcorn Maker. [1]
A quick
explanation of the Popcorn Maker Interface Components can be found on WikiHow here (last section) and here. In addition, “Using Mozilla Popcorn Maker to
Create an Interactive Video” Tutorial by Miriam Posner, available here, and as a pdf download here.
Further reading / viewing :
Mozilla’s
Webmaker Tools page here. Links to X-Ray
Goggles (allow you to see the building blocks that make up websites on the
internet) and Thimble (which makes it
ridiculously simple to create and share your own web pages).
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