tkerby wrote:I'd normally consider importing as image files but there are some quite complex animations on the slides, hence the thought of automatically splitting them as clips.
The scene detector should be able to do this as long as there is something it can latch onto to see that things have changed. Of course, it's oriented towards actual film-like footage where there are cuts that change the viewpoint and may not be as helpful for slides that pretty much look alike if you squint a little. Not sure if your drop-to-black will be perceived as a shot change or not. Please report back on how that works for future folks.
tkerby wrote:In the future, I'm more tempted to build in Resolve/Fusion from the start. I've done a little of that before in Premiere with titles setup for text and pulling in images directly although doing this in PowerPoint can be a little quicker, especially if I also need to produce handouts.
Also, if you've not used Fusion before it's quite different from layer-based approaches (Premiere, After Effects) so a learning curve will be involved.
tkerby wrote:My other thought was to record the timings of mouse clicks for advancing slides. That would be incredibly useful to have all the queue points
It's conceivable that if you have everything sync'd properly and then convert your mouse clicks into an EDL, you could have it chop up your video precisely. So some cleverness and perhaps programming will be required, but if it works it'll be less prone to error than a cut detector.
Resolve Studio 19 latest, Fusion Studio 19 latest, MacOS Sequoia latest, MacBook Pro M4 Max