Let me keep the gushing going. Just watched the FCP X video. (
Quicker text summary) John Siracusa says "Final Cut Pro X looks like iMovie Super Duper Mega Pro, and I mean that in the best possible way." Agreed. I've never used it, but from the demo and the raucous cheers, it eliminates a lot of common editing chores and workarounds. The timeline is intelligent about what video/audio tracks move together and what happens when clips overlap, and makes it easy to collapse complex edits down. To an outsider, it seems how it should be, but I think pros have been laboring with very literal timelines in all their apps. It's clear that Apple did their user research.
Other "this is how it should be, of course" features are not worrying about what format or resolution your clips are in, and clip color correction. The latter really shows off what this remake is about. If you want to match color between clips, you apply an eyedropper to the clip you want to match to, get an instant preview image, and in a few seconds it's already rendered the whole clip in the background. To see this used to change a daytime shot to a sunset shot seems... simple. But Apple's applied Grand Central's horsepower to a non-trivial task, and then polished the interaction to make it feel like such a lightweight operation that encourages experimentation. That engineering+design excellence in equal amounts is Apple at its best.
My one experience with the FCP suite was using Motion (again, weekend deadline to learn and implement) to integrate some graphics into some
video I shot to fake a UI. (It's the "happiness" gauge.) Pretty quick to get it to track points in the video so that my graphic could move with the camera jitter and fit right in, and animate elements like the needle. If this is the last generation, I can't wait to use the X version. Good software makes me wish I had more opportunities to use it. And at $299 now, I might find myself straining the surly bonds of iMovie much sooner. That price should complete Apple's dominance of the industry all the way down to public access stations.
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 04/14/2011 06:22AM by johnny k.