Keyboard/shuttle alternative

jeremyk wrote on 12/31/2003, 3:08 PM
Some while back, Boodabang posted a message in the Vegas Scripting forum about a game-controller keyboard he or she was using with Vegas:

http://mediasoftware.sonypictures.com/forums/ShowMessage.asp?Forum=21&MessageID=235519

This is something called the Belkin Nostromo SpeedPad n52. I don't get the Joseph Conrad reference, but this thing is amazingly cool, and I think it's going to revolutionize my Vegas operation.

It's a USB keypad for the left hand. There are 14 keys and a scroll wheel accessible to the fingers, and two buttons and a directional switch reachable by the thumb. There are four shift modes that can multiply the number of functions the keypad can perform.

The idea is that you can do just about EVERY editing function with the mouse in the right hand and the SpeedPad in the left hand. Your hands only need to leave your wrists to type text on the keyboard.

First of all, it's plenty cheap -- I got mine from Dell for $30.45, with free shipping. The software allows you to assign single keys or macros to any key, and the macros include the ability to do mouse clicks. Each application you use it with can have its own macro set. The software appears to be well designed.

It just was delivered about an hour ago, so I have plenty more experimenting to do. The first thing I tried was a key to open a clip in the Trimmer, something I do fairly often. Right-mouse-click M is the key sequence I programmed into the keypad, so I just put the mouse pointer over the event and click with my left little finger on the home row of the keypad. Presto -- clip is open in the trimmer.

There are SO many possibilities. Single keystroke to make the scopes appear and disappear. One-stroke select-events-to-end. Etc., etc. WAY more useful than a keyboard with Vegas functions displayed on it, I think. Of course, I still will have to memorize the keypad functions, but I can assign them in a way that's most convenient and memorable for ME.

Thank you, Boodabang!

Comments

busterkeaton wrote on 12/31/2003, 3:34 PM
What would you use to jog or to shuttle the material?
TheHappyFriar wrote on 12/31/2003, 3:35 PM
I've got the n50. It's sweeeeet. :) I've assigned the "mouse wheel" button to play/stop the timeline. Another key to play/stop the local window. :) One to move 1 pixel forward/backward, another to move 1 frame forward/backward, one to place a new marker and label it "Marker Name Here". :) Also added a button to add audio/video layers, slice at the marker, zoom in/out, etc.

The new drivers give me problems though so i need to downgrade to the lower version. :(

Very nice. :)
jeremyk wrote on 1/1/2004, 10:58 AM
TheHappyFriar,

What kind of problems were caused by the new drivers? What OS are you using (I'm on W2K)?
TheHappyFriar wrote on 1/1/2004, 1:40 PM
I'm on Win2k. With the new drivers (v3) it crashes after 15-20 minutes of loading it up. I don't notice a big difference between the old ones and new ones in terms of features for me, so i'm not worried.
jeremyk wrote on 1/1/2004, 2:56 PM
Ah. I seem to have version 3.0b. Haven't encountered any trouble yet, though. Thanks.
TheHappyFriar wrote on 1/1/2004, 5:20 PM
Well, like I said, I have the n50 it could be a slight incompatible thing. The 3.0 drivers added stuff for your version i think.