This is the documentation for the Slideroll™ Slideshow Creator application. Choose among the topics below for help on a particular subject. If you have specific questions, check the Frequently Asked Questions page, or visit the forums.
This program uses many terms that are familiar to you, however the context in which they are used may be a little different than what you are used to. Following is an explanation of some common terms and how they are used in Slideroll™.
Slideroll™ has a drag-and-drop interface. Almost every action can be completed using only a mouse. In some cases, there is added functionality when the shift and control buttons are used in conjunction with the mouse. For instance, you can select a series of photos in the photo manager by choosing one photo, then holding down shift and choosing another further down the list.
Slideroll™ has a fairly simple interface that may appear familiar to you if you've used video editing software. It consists of program menus (1) at the top, a slide tray (2) for your resources on the left side, a timeline (3) at the bottom, a sample pane (4) for previewing individual shots, and a preview pane (5) for previewing your finished slide show.
The menus and their functions are as follows:
Since the objective of Slideroll™ is to create slide shows from your digital photos, the first thing you need to do is upload your photos.
When you start the creator, you will see a dialogue box entitled "Get Started Using Slideroll™". Click on the "Upload Photos" button to begin uploading your photos.
A pop-up window will appear, and then you can click 'browse' to find photos on your computer to upload. You can also activate this pop-up by clicking the "Upload More" button from the photo manager dialogue box.
Photos that you wish to upload must be available on your computer's hard drive. They must also be in JPEG format. Almost all digital cameras save in this format by default.
When you start the creator, it begins with a blank palette for you to begin building a new slide show. The procedure for creating a slide show is as follows:
When you start a slide show, it is a good idea to check its properties by selecting
. There, you can edit the fade in and fade out times, default shot length and overlap, and choose a thumbnail image for representation on the site. You can also change the width and height of your slideshow, as well as the roundness of the corners on the slideshow frame.Once you've uploaded your photos, it's time to add them to your project. In the menu, select
. Then a dialogue box entitled "My Photos" will appear. Your photos will appear in the center well. You may then drag and drop photos from the dialogue box onto the slide tray. Holding down shift will allow you to select a series of images, and holding down control will allow you to select multiple non-adjacent images.You can also create title slides for use in your slide show. You can edit the titles directly in the sample pane. These can be panned and zoomed just like regular slides, and you can even adjust the background color. To add a text slide, select
. A new text slide will appear in your slide tray. To edit the text in it, drag the slide onto the timeline. It will create a shot, and you can edit the text by clicking on the title in the sample pane. To change the background color of the text slide, choose the rainbow button next to the sample pane.The timeline is the visual representation of your slide show over time. The timeline contains a horizontal strip where shots are placed. Above the strip are time markers. When the timeline gets longer than can be displayed, a horizontal scroll bar will appear so you can scroll back and forth along the timeline. Above the timeline is the playhead. You can scrub the timeline by dragging in the orange zone above the timeline. To add shots to the timeline, simple drag slides from the slide tray onto the timeline. You can select multiple slides by pressing shift to select a series or control to select multiple non-adjacent slides.
Shots are instances of slides in the slidetray. There appearance in the slide show corresponds to their inpoint and outpoint on the timeline. If shots overlap, they will automatically fade between one another. You can drag them back and forth by pressing and dragging on their middle area. Pressing and dragging on the ends adjusts their duration. Adjacent shots will automatically stick together, so you have to click and drag on the corner tabs to pull them apart. Shots cannot be dragged past one another on the timeline. To change their order, you can 'tear off' a shot by dragging a shot down off the timeline, at which point you can place it again anywhere on the timeline.
The simplest transition to make is a fade transition. To create a fade transition, simply overlap two shots on the timeline. Once you have a fade transition, you can alter the transition effect by selecting the slide you are transitioning to, and then choosing an effect from the transitions menu. The transitions menu is the 'yin-yang' button next to the sample pane, above the rainbow button. You can also create interesting transitions by creating text slides, erasing the text, and setting the background color to something other than black. Then, if you place the blank text slide over an image, it can fade to a color.
If you click on a shot in the timeline, it will appear in your sample pane. Below that, the inpoint and outpoint controls will become active. If you click on the inpoint button, you can crop the image by adjusting the zoom level and pan placement of the image. If you click the outpoint after that and make changes, the image will pan and/or zoom between the inpoint and outpoint. If you hold down shift during a pan, you can constrain your pan to perfectly horizontal or vertical. If you hold down shift during a zoom, you can match a zoom level between inpoint and outpoint.
The Slideshow Creator has a large selection of music loops that you can choose from to use as a soundtrack. Click the 'music note' button above the 'yin-yang' button, and you'll see a list of music tracks to choose from. You can preview them, and then click on the one you want and it will play as your slideshow plays. To turn off music, simply click on the 'music note' button again, and click 'Turn Music Off'.
Pro members to add custom soundtracks to their downloaded slideshows. If you wish to add your own custom music or narration, you can do so by following these steps:
It is recommended that you compress your MP3 down to a maximum of 64k in order for the music or narration to load quickly.
Considerations: Adding music is complicated by the many music file formats that exist. Flash reads MP3, but iTunes uses AAC (m4a) by default. You need to make certain that your music is a real MP3 file. By default, Windows XP hides file extensions of known file-types. If your system is configured to hide file extensions, and you name your file soundtrack.mp3, then you are actually naming it soundtrack.mp3.mp3 because the real extension is hidden. In that case, you would need to rename it just "soundtrack".
Note: Use this capability at your own risk. Slideroll™ cannot be held responsible if you upload copyrighted music to your own website. This is an unsupported feature at this time.
UPDATE: You can add your own MP3 music to your slideshow if you download and install the Slideroll Videomaker and create a video from your slideshow.
To add captions to your shots, first select the shot inthe timeline that you would like to add a caption to. Then, click the 'a' button above the transitions (yin-yang) button. A dialogue box will appear where you can enter a title, caption, and credit. To display the captions in your final slideshow, make sure you check the box labeled "display captions."
Note: If you are publishing your slideshow on your own web page, make sure you include the captions javascript include code that is included when you click the "Get Code" button. Place the javascript include code on your web page in the place you want your captions to appear.
To preview your slide show, select
. Your slide show must be saved before you can preview or publish it. Saving your slide show will only save the project data to the server, it will not publish it. When you preview your slide show, you can see how it will appear with the quality settings you've chosen, see how large the file size will be, and see how long it takes to load.To publish your slide show, select
. You will see a dialogue box where you can choose your quality level settings, whether you want controls to appear, if you want to loop the slide show playback, whether or not you want it to be private, and if you wish to allow people to comment on it.Once you publish, you'll see a pop-up window with your published slide show. You'll also see controls for entering a text description, obtaining HTML code to include it on your site, view and administrate comments, and e-mail it to friends.
Emailing your slide show is simple. On your publish screen, simply click the e-mail button and enter the person's email address to whom you want to send your slide show. You can reach your publish page by publishing the slide show from the creator, or later by clicking on a slide show in "My Slide shows" on the main site.
Once your slide show is published, you can view the finished slideshow on your publish screen. Below the slideshow is a red button labeled "Download This Slideshow". Click on that button and you can download a ZIP file containing your slide show. You can also get to this screen by choosing "My Slideshows" in the main menu and clicking on one of your slide shows.