About this manual, Style conventions – Matrox Electronic Systems Matrox RT.X2 User Manual

Page 11

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About this manual

• Native .mxf file support for Panasonic P2 (SD and 720p formats) in Adobe

Premiere Pro and After Effects.

• Matrox EZ-MXF utility for native .mxf file support in Video for Windows

(.avi file) applications.

• Realtime mixed-format multi-camera editing.

• Realtime high-quality hardware downconverting for SD output of an HD

project.

• Accelerated media encoding, including export to DVD, Flash Video, and

Adobe Clip Notes.

• WYSIWYG plug-ins for many popular compositing and animation

programs, including Adobe After Effects, Adobe Photoshop, and Autodesk
Combustion.

• DV-1394, composite, S-Video, and SD/HD analog component video input

and output.

• Full-resolution DVI output for previewing the video output on a DVI

monitor that accepts digital input, such as an inexpensive digital flat-panel
display. (Not supported on RT.X2 LE.)

About this manual

This manual explains how to use Matrox RT.X2 with the provided Matrox
software, including how to use your RT.X2 system with Adobe Premiere Pro.

¦

Note

Throughout the Matrox RT.X2 documentation, the term “RT.X2” refers

to RT.X2, RT.X2 LE, and RT.X2 SD, unless indicated otherwise.

Style conventions

The following style conventions are used in this manual:

• When an operation is different between Windows Vista and Windows XP,

the operating system is displayed in brackets after the operation. For
example, right-click

Computer

(Vista) or

My Computer

(XP).

• The names of files, directory paths, and manuals appear in italics. For

example:

$

The data is stored in the sample.wav file.

$

The file is located in your C:\Windows\System directory.

$

Please refer to your Matrox RT.X2 Installation Manual.

• Menus and commands that you need to choose are displayed in the form

Menu > Command

. For example,

File > Save

means click

File

in the

menu bar, then click

Save

in the menu that appears.

• The names of keys are displayed in small capital bold letters, such as the

CTRL

key.

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