Request script/little software that can detect shaky parts from videos

adrian-oli wrote on 9/10/2019, 9:56 AM

I would like to request a script/little software(I pay for it) that can work inside Magix Vegas Pro 15/17 that can auto-detect shaky parts of a video and place markers at these places, it would be great if someone could to this and tell me a price, if this is not possible I have another way to make this work and I explained it better in a 1 minute video:

Thank you

 

 

Comments

fr0sty wrote on 9/10/2019, 5:04 PM

what would the end result be, as in, what would those markers be used for?

Systems:

Desktop

AMD Ryzen 7 1800x 8 core 16 thread at stock speed

64GB 3000mhz DDR4

Geforce RTX 3090

Windows 10

Laptop:

ASUS Zenbook Pro Duo 32GB (9980HK CPU, RTX 2060 GPU, dual 4K touch screens, main one OLED HDR)

adrian-oli wrote on 9/11/2019, 2:27 AM

what would the end result be, as in, what would those markers be used for?

Because I edit weddings it would help me to find faster the shaky parts from videos and cut the out where the markers are placed

3POINT wrote on 9/11/2019, 2:56 AM

I know a NLE (unfortunately not Vegas) who can analyze and mark seperately parts in a videoclip where zooming, panning, faces, speech, motion, shaky video or poor lightning is detected. After the analyze it's easy to cut, for example, the parts out where shakiness was detected. The only disadvantage is that there is no way to set the sensivity of shakiness detection, so only really shaky parts will be detected.

Sylk wrote on 9/11/2019, 4:43 AM

what would the end result be, as in, what would those markers be used for?

Because I edit weddings it would help me to find faster the shaky parts from videos and cut the out where the markers are placed

@adrian-oli

Wait, You plan to publish weddings video without watch them?? You know, shakes are not the worst things you can see on video with many people...

Software:
[OS]  : Windows 10 Ent. x64 v1903 (18362.535)
[NLE] : Vegas Pro 17.0 (Build 321) // (Build 284 if posted before 9/24/19)
[DRV] : Studio 536.23 (Display, PhysX, HD Audio) // (Game Ready 436.15 if posted before 9/24/19)
Hardware:
[GPU] : Gainward RTX 4090 Phantom / GTX 1080 Phoenix GLH
[CPU] : Intel Core i7-2600K @3.4GHz OC@4.5GHz (HyperThreaded) | AirCooling: Noctua NH-D14
[RAM] : 16GB (4x 4GB GSkill Ripjaws X DDR3 1600MHz 9-9-9-24) @1333MHz
[SSD] : Samsung 860 Pro 1TB
[MOB] : Asus P8P67 Deluxe (Rev.1), No iGPU support
[SND] : Asus Xonar Essence STX
[PSU] : Corsair HX750
Devices:
[DSP1]: 30" DELL UltraSharp U3011 @2560x1600
[DSP2]: 28" Samsung U28D590 @3840x2160

[UPS] : Eaton 5PX 2200i RT

[CAM] : GoPro Hero8/4/3 Black. Apple iPhone 11Pro/6S.
[REC] : Zoom Handy Recorder H4.
Dexcon wrote on 9/11/2019, 6:39 AM

Because I edit weddings it would help me to find faster the shaky parts from videos and cut the out where the markers are placed

Hopefully a shaky part wouldn't happen on the "I do!" moment - I wouldn't imagine that the clients would be all that happy to have that part cut out. Where there might be some shakiness especially on important scenes, surely a better approach is to attempt to salvage the footage with stabilisation on the shaky part. If you're recording in 4K and delivering in HD or less, then there's plenty or opportunity to zoom in on the stabilised video and insert it in to the project as an apparently differently framed shot.

I'm sure you have your reasons for doing what you want to do, but it does seem to me a bit like 'auto-pilot' editing.

Cameras: Sony FDR-AX100E; GoPro Hero 11 Black Creator Edition

Installed: Vegas Pro 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21 & 22, HitFilm Pro 2021.3, DaVinci Resolve Studio 19.0.3, BCC 2025, Mocha Pro 2025.0, NBFX TotalFX 7, Neat NR, DVD Architect 6.0, MAGIX Travel Maps, Sound Forge Pro 16, SpectraLayers Pro 11, iZotope RX11 Advanced and many other iZ plugins, Vegasaur 4.0

Windows 11

Dell Alienware Aurora 11:

10th Gen Intel i9 10900KF - 10 cores (20 threads) - 3.7 to 5.3 GHz

NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2080 SUPER 8GB GDDR6 - liquid cooled

64GB RAM - Dual Channel HyperX FURY DDR4 XMP at 3200MHz

C drive: 2TB Samsung 990 PCIe 4.0 NVMe M.2 PCIe SSD

D: drive: 4TB Samsung 870 SATA SSD (used for media for editing current projects)

E: drive: 2TB Samsung 870 SATA SSD

F: drive: 6TB WD 7200 rpm Black HDD 3.5"

Dell Ultrasharp 32" 4K Color Calibrated Monitor

 

LAPTOP:

Dell Inspiron 5310 EVO 13.3"

i5-11320H CPU

C Drive: 1TB Corsair Gen4 NVMe M.2 2230 SSD (upgraded from the original 500 GB SSD)

Monitor is 2560 x 1600 @ 60 Hz

adrian-oli wrote on 9/11/2019, 11:32 AM

I know a NLE (unfortunately not Vegas) who can analyze and mark seperately parts in a videoclip where zooming, panning, faces, speech, motion, shaky video or poor lightning is detected. After the analyze it's easy to cut, for example, the parts out where shakiness was detected. The only disadvantage is that there is no way to set the sensivity of shakiness detection, so only really shaky parts will be detected.


Which is the program? I'm curious to see how it reacts?

 

adrian-oli wrote on 9/11/2019, 11:33 AM

what would the end result be, as in, what would those markers be used for?

Because I edit weddings it would help me to find faster the shaky parts from videos and cut the out where the markers are placed

@adrian-oli

Wait, You plan to publish weddings video without watch them?? You know, shakes are not the worst things you can see on video with many people...


I don't plan to do that, I do watch and edit the wedding, I just have my won process and that helps me

adrian-oli wrote on 9/11/2019, 11:35 AM

Because I edit weddings it would help me to find faster the shaky parts from videos and cut the out where the markers are placed

Hopefully a shaky part wouldn't happen on the "I do!" moment - I wouldn't imagine that the clients would be all that happy to have that part cut out. Where there might be some shakiness especially on important scenes, surely a better approach is to attempt to salvage the footage with stabilisation on the shaky part. If you're recording in 4K and delivering in HD or less, then there's plenty or opportunity to zoom in on the stabilised video and insert it in to the project as an apparently differently framed shot.

I'm sure you have your reasons for doing what you want to do, but it does seem to me a bit like 'auto-pilot' editing.


Hi, you are definitely right but the weedings are always shoot from 2-3 camera so no worries for cutting out on the shaky part but anyway, thank you!