 Now, I've talked to you guys about Creosede many times. Normally, Sandrine Lissot is the person I talk to, but she has a sore throat, so this year we're gonna talk to Raphael Sebbe. How are you doing today? Great, we just won a prize, so we are so proud about it. With Emulcio, this is our latest application about video stabilization for iPad and iPhone, and it will take your shaky videos and make them very stable and smooth, and we are very excited about this new app. So I always like to start things with a problem to be solved, and you sure nailed it right there. That it's shaky video on an iPhone? Wow, I wonder if I've ever done that, right? Yeah, sure. It will process the video from an iPhone, but also from GoPro cameras, for instance, so it's really great for video makers. Oh, that's fantastic. We're big GoPro video fans, too, so that'll be great. So how does it work? The way it works is that you have to import your movie into the application. It will analyze it. When the analysis is finished, you will be able to tune the stabilizer settings until you get the proper result that you want, and then you export it back to your album. So now, my experience with stabilization programs is you're going to lose some of the outer edge stuff because it has to move in and use less of the video, correct? Exactly, that's the way it works, but you can at least change the amount of the zoom. If it's only small shakes, you can have a small stabilizer, a smaller setting, to have very little lost around the edges. Oh, I see, I see. So can you show it to us for the video? Video watchers, let's turn it around this way so Steve can see what we're doing. So he's got a video up of some, looks like some kid skiing, and on the top half is a very stable version of the video, and on the bottom half it's really, really shaky. So I wouldn't necessarily believe this, but Pilot Pete came over to me and showed me video of his own child skiing, and he showed that it did show the video stabilization. So right now he's dragging a slider up and down of how much stabilization strength to apply, where if it's a lot of it applied, it's zooming in a little bit, and it looks really, really stable. That looks like even I could figure it out. Okay, what'd you just do now? You just tapped a target. Yeah, this shows the instantaneous motion compensation. This means the Red Cross shows by how much we compensate motion to have a stabilized movie. So is that just for fun, or does that actually help you figure out what to do? It can help you choose the right amount of strength, because if there's only small motion, you don't need to have a high zoom into the image. You can just have a small one, and this will be correct in the end. See, cool. So now do you stabilize the entire video, or can you stabilize just part of it? How does that work? No, you stabilize the entire video, but there is some basic timeline editing as well. So you can just cut some part of the movie like this. If you don't... So he's pulling it like a standard trim like you would in QuickTime. Then you delete some part and you do some basic editing there. So I saw some controls on the left-hand side of the screen. What does it say? It says T, X, Y, R, and W, what's that? You can disable the stabilizer for one or both axis, Y and X and Y axis. You can enable and disable the rotational stabilization for the camera. And the third settings is something pretty unique that even Apple doesn't do in its built-in stabilizer. It's correcting the rolling shutter effect. It means when you are traveling, when you're panning with your device, the image will squeeze, will deform with an angle, and we can compensate for that as well. Oh, like the propeller on a plane, the way you'll see it actually look like it's bent. You can fix that? Oh, a wheel, that sort of thing? We can fix on the entire image. I can show you an example of that if you want. Okay, well, maybe we'll do that off the air, but this sounds really cool. So the application is called Emulcio, and the company is called CREAseed, that's C-R-E-A-C-E-E-D, and what is the website? It's creaseed.com, and you will find all the products over there. Great, and they are also the makers of Prismo, the document scanner application that I choose to use. Thank you very much, Raphael. Thank you very much.