![]() ![]() Its just these two events on my one internal hard drive and the one project on my one internal hard drive. And you can see I have no events saved here for these external hard drives. And you can see the different hard drives represented here, and you can tweak the triangles to open and close them. And in 2007, I've got an event here as well. ![]() So you've got down here a list of hard drives like before and events are organized by date so you have these little calendar icons here and say in 2010 there is a single event there. The other type of file is an event file, and these are basically the video clips that you are going to use to build the project from. If there are any projects on these external drives, it will also list them in the same way. You can see on the left here it lists different hard drives attached to your Mac, so here's the main Mac hard drive and here are the projects on it. The first are projects and if you look here at the top you've got your project library, and it will list a project with a little sampling of what is inside of it, here. So there are two different types of files that are stored by iMovie. You see, iMovie has it's own little file system. So I get asked from time to time about how iMovie stores its files, why can't you open a project and save a project like a normal file say from a Word Processor or graphics program. Video Transcript: On today's episode lets look at how iMovie stores it's files. Check out MacMost Now 462: How iMovie Stores Files at YouTube for closed captioning and more options. ![]()
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