Final Cut Pro X now available in the Mac App Store

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Final Cut Pro X dropped today with a friendly $299 price tag. It’s not the full suite that we’re used to purchasing, but I actually like the ala-carte method better. Motion 5 and Compressor 4 are also available via the Mac App Store for $49 each. So for $400 you could be on your way to making some decent video productions.

When I have a chance to download and test, I’ll write up a quick review. For now though–has anyone else upgraded? Planning to upgrade? I’ve heard that there are some short-comings with this first release of Final Cut X, but I don’t see that stopping anyone from upgrading (just keep your current version handy in case there are issues.)

Apple – Press Info – Apple iWork Now Available For iPhone & iPod touch Users

CUPERTINO, California—May 31, 2011—Apple® today announced that its groundbreaking iWork® productivity apps, Keynote®, Pages® and Numbers®, are now available for iPhone® and iPod touch®, as well as iPad®. Created for the Mac® and then completely redesigned for iOS and Apple’s revolutionary Multi-Touch™ interface, Keynote, Pages and Numbers allow you to create and share stunning presentations, beautifully formatted documents and powerful spreadsheets on the go. iWork apps are available on the App Store™ for $9.99 each to new users and as a free update for existing iWork for iPad customers.

I can’t see myself typing up an entire document, or creating a Keynote presentation on my iPhone, but it is awesome that the functionality is available now.

If you already have these apps on your iPad, will you be using them on your iPhone/iPod Touch as well? If you don’t already have them, will you be purchasing now that they’re universal apps?

Apple announces Final Cut Pro X

BREAKING: Apple announces Final Cut Pro X at SuperMeet
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 BREAKING: Apple announces Final Cut Pro X at SuperMeet

Today at the SuperMeet event, Apple announced Final Cut Pro X. It’s all 64-bit, and frankly, looks great.

Final Cut X is fully-color managed via colorsync, with a resolution-independent playback system. The whole gig uses Grand Central Dispatch, meaning rendering and other tasks can use multiple cores more easily. Color matching can be done between clips very simply. More advanced color correction can be done right within the app.

FCP X has also learned some new importing tricks, including automatic, non-destructive color balance fixing, media and more.

Editing has been overhauled, as well.. FCP X boasts a “magnetic timeline” that allows users to slide clips around the timeline, without disrupting the placement of other clips that might be in the way. Additionally, primary audio and video are locked together, and secondary audio sources can be tied to video clips as well, meaning accidental sync issues should be a thing of the past. Animating Keyframes are done in the timeline, as opposed to an additional window.

Clips can also have keywords applied to single sections, unlike in the past, when an entire clip had to use the same keywords. Clips can also be stored in iMovie-like collections, or be used to create easy-to-handle sequences, called “compound” clips. A new Inline Precision Editor makes editing clips together easier than ever, with previews of unused footage easy to access for trimming.

It is clear that Apple borrowed some things from iMovie for this. FCP now includes a film strip view for easier versioning and keyword tagging, not unlike iMovie.

FCP is more than just video, though. Audio appears to have gotten some love, too. FCP X can automatically analyze audio and sync similar audio clips. Waveform analysis looks like it has gotten beefier, with much better precision editing tools. Keyframing should also be easier in the new version. (See here.)

FCP X has built-in tools making editing b-roll easier. Dubbbed “Second Stories.” Gotta love Apple’s branding for this kind of stuff.

For those who are keyboard lovers (like me), FCP X seems to include far more in the way of keyboard commands. In his demo, Apple’s Randy Ubillos said, “everything can be driven from the keyboard.”

Reports are coming in that the demo is a “beta,” indicating that FCP X might not be quite ready for release.

Reports are also coming in that FCP X won’t require transcoding, which would be huge for DSLR users and others. Everyone who is tweeting from the event keeps saying how fast the demo looks.

FCP X will be released in June of this year, on the App Store, for just $299, according to @fcpsupermeet. The rest of the Final Cut Pro Studio (apps like Color, Motion, Compressor) were not mentioned at the event.

Information via PhotographyBay@fcpsupermeet, @reximilian, @robimbs

Image via @robimbs, via MacStories

Rumor: New Final Cut Pro to debut on April 12

Rumor: New Final Cut Pro to debut on April 12
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According to ProVideoCoalition, Apple is planning on debuting the next version of Final Cut Pro at the Final Cut Pro User Group SuperMeet on April 12. According to PVC, “Apple will be using the Vegas Supermeet to announce the next version of Final Cut Pro. Supposedly, Apple will be taking over the entire event for their announcement, canceling all other sponsors, including AJA, Avid, Canon, BlackMagic, Autodesk and others, who were set to give presentations.”

While the FCP SuperMeet does seem to be an odd event for Apple to launch the next version of their professional editing software (because NAB 2011 starts on April 9), the rumors do seem to have credibility because Canon, Avid, and Autodesk have all confirmed that their sponsorships have been canceled because Apple has demanded no one else has the main stage. A Canon spokesperson supposedly confirmed to PVC, “Canon was told last night that Apple has demanded ALL ‘lectern’ or stage time exclusively.” Likewise, Avid told them, “Apple doesn’t want anyone to have stage time but them.”

There’s no word yet on what the next Final Cut Pro will feature, but in February a group of high-profile video editors were supposedly given time with the software. Their reactions to the new FCP were overwhelmingly positive, with one of them saying the next Final Cut Pro is “the biggest overhaul to Final Cut Pro since the original version was created over 10 years ago.”

Rumor: New Final Cut Pro to debut on April 12 originally appeared on TUAW on Tue, 05 Apr 2011 21:55:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Radio reporter uses iPhone 4 for all of his work

Love reading stories like this. Anyone else using their iPhone/iPad for pro work?
 
Radio reporter uses iPhone 4 for all of his work
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Neal Augenstein

There’s a very cool story over on the MediaShift pages of the PBS website about how a radio reporter has replaced almost all of his bulky radio equipment and with an iPhone 4.

Neal Augenstein started working for WTOP in Washington 14 years ago, when just his mobile phone weighed as much as a bowling bag, he says. Since then, the size of equipment has shrunk, and now he does almost all of his reporting with nothing more than his iPhone and a few other pieces of kit — some of them homemade.

Augenstein says, “with the Apple iPhone 4 and several apps, I can produce intricate audio and video reports, broadcast live, take and edit photos, write web content and distribute it through social media from a single device.”

He uses the VC Audio Pro app to edit his audio and the same company’s 1stVideo app to edit video captured on his iPhone. He often even uses the iPhone’s built-in microphone after the Blue Mikey model he used with his old iPhone 3GS wasn’t compatible with the new phone. Photos come courtesy of the built-in camera, which he edits by simply zooming and cropping in his Camera Roll then taking a screenshot to upload.

He also carries an iPad to take notes in press conferences while his iPhone is on a press conference podium — supported by a regular mike stand with a bit of foam padding.

You can see Neal in action here doing an interview with his iPhone, and you can listen to some of his audio via the station’s “As Heard on WTOP” pages here. It’s impressive how he’s reduced his equipment down to such basics, and it’s also impressive that the iPhone 4 can produce broadcast-quality media. Good work, chap!

Radio reporter uses iPhone 4 for all of his work originally appeared on TUAW on Tue, 05 Apr 2011 09:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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