So the colorist who is trying to color correct using a single trackball or mouse is constantly having to tweak one setting that has been changed by another. For example, if you change your black level, your midrange level also is usually affected. But for color correction, the only way to be able to be efficient is with the use of multiple controls at the same time, because one control often affects another. For many editing tasks, the keyboard offers enough power if it is used wisely. No where is that more evident than in color correction. The goal of all of these external “beyond the keyboard” controllers is that they create efficiencies in doing the things that we do every day as editors.
I also spent some time on the Sony Xpri editing system which also had some great manual user interface controls that helped tweak effects settings, color correction and, of course, do “tape” transport.
And while I was writing my book “The Art and Technique of Digital Color Correction” I had access to Tangent Devices’ CP-100 and CP-200 color correction controllers. My second interface was the JLCooper FaderMaster Pro. Avid also had an EditDroid controller and a Steenbeck controller. My first was the old Avid “MUI” controller, or Manual User Interface. The JLCooper wasn’t my first control surface since abandoning the world off on-line linear editing. That’s what external control devices give the editor and colorist. It was a blessing because of the return of EFFICIENCY. But it was more than simply the return of the buttons and various controllers I’d fallen in love with so many years ago. So it was with great joy that I unpacked my recently arrived JLCooper Eclipse controller. I’ve spent most of the last 16 years working at a computer screen feeling like an accountant instead of a fighter pilot (though now, cockpits are starting to look more like computer monitors). No feeling like some highly trained fighter pilot (though how many fighter pilots have meals catered in to their “suite?”). So it’s kind of ironic that less than 10 years in to my tenure in the kind of on-line suites that I’d always loved, I chucked the whole lot for cutting on NLEs like the Avid.
Those are the steps which you need to follow in order to completely uninstall Eclipse IDE from Windows operating system.One of the reasons I got into this business in the first place was for the cool LCD displays, colored buttons, and various joysticks and fader bars.
m2 directory stores jar files downloaded by Maven (repository) so it usually contains a huge amount of data. NOTE: If you don’t use Maven any more, you can delete the. Depending on how you use Eclipse, this directory may contain large amount of data.
p2 directory stores cache, settings and temporary files that were created by Eclipse IDE. p2 directory under your user home directory C:\Users\YourUserName\ - The.
In this short article, I’d like to share with you how to remove Eclipse IDE completely from Windows operating system.