While a bunch of great online courses exist, there are hardly
any decent video courses out there.
Not exact matches
Of
course, 2011 will go down as Summit's final year as an independent studio; the company was recently acquired by fellow mini-major Lionsgate, a company that had less than half the domestic box office gross (and an even lower average Metascore) than Summit last year, but one that boasts a significant home
video library as well as a
decent presence in television.
Joining the
video is a surprisingly tame DD 5.1 track; of
course, the song selections are so banal that they wouldn't give the speakers a workout under the best conditions, but aside from some
decent low - end for the sci - fi components, the mix is as humdrum as the movie itself — although the audio on the DVD is without any serious defects.
It does a
decent job at it too, with support for in - session collaboration, handouts (of
course material), breakout sessions (allowing a larger training session to spin - off into smaller groups), shared
videos, and collaborating document editing.
They also include some
decent graphics, photos, and
video throughout the
course.
The logical way forward, assuming these new apps manage to gain
decent traction, is to build Duo's
video calling feature into Allo, with Knock Knock, of
course.