Dylan Reeve
Well-known member
It's not possible within the confines of FCP due to it's lack of media management. It uses filenames and frame counts to define links.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: this_feature_currently_requires_accessing_site_using_safari
We'll see at NAB.
One day someone is going to have to sit down in front of an avid machine and a final cut machine and show me this "media management" BS cause I just don't buy into it.
My only understanding is that it allows Avid users to be extremely lazy and not name their files properly because in avid everything is dumped into a single folder where the program keeps track of it in some weird fashion that causes it to take forever to import anything cause it has to convert it into something it can read.
It's my impression of the way it works but I could be wrong and I'm more than happy for someone to show me how I'm wrong.
Thing is the only time I ever herd anything that made sense was this time I was digitizing video and the guy was explaining the importance of naming the files right when bringing them in.
If you want to do complex stuff and all is online straight from the beginning FCP has advantages if you consider budget. Also the editing itself feels more intuitive - up to ónes taste though.
People say "why not just do it all online anyway?" - there are many many reasons. In the case of our current TV series, the offline editorial has used a little over 1.2TB of disk space with DV25 offline material - if we'd done it all online with ProRes or DNxHD, that'd be close to 10 times that, which becomes a much much bigger headache. It has over 10,000 individual clips from over 150 tapes. Managing that as simple files within a filesystem (as with FCP) would be a huge pain in the ass.
Sanjin, I'm beginning to think that you don't like Avid for some reason
Tell you what, if Apple sold a program called Final Cut Pro Extreme for $1000 more, that had:
1. fewer weird bugs
2. ProRes36 (a nice offline cross-platform 1920x1080 codec)
3. free codecs so anyone could work with your files (not just Mac FCP users)
4. more robust media management
5. ability for multiple editors to easily work on the same project
6. arguably nicer and more responsive editing tools
7. some nifty features, like the ability to paint mattes, script synching, better keying,
8. a license that works on both PC and Mac (you get both versions when you buy it)
...would you buy it?
If you were a professional for whom a day saved in the offline editing room is worth $$$, or for whom a few hours saved in an online bay or sound mix are worth $$$, you'd definitely look into it, because it could possibly pay for itself very quickly.
If you don't consider the above and understand that on many jobs Avid is better and would be well worth the money, then you simply being closed-minded or are brainwashed by marketing.
Bruce Allen
www.boacinema.com
Winning an award doesn't mean it was good.... It just means it was better than the other three films nominated.
Sanjin, I'm beginning to think that you don't like Avid for some reason
Tell you what, if Apple sold a program called Final Cut Pro Extreme for $1000 more, that had:
1. fewer weird bugs
2. ProRes36 (a nice offline cross-platform 1920x1080 codec)
3. free codecs so anyone could work with your files (not just Mac FCP users)
4. more robust media management
5. ability for multiple editors to easily work on the same project
6. arguably nicer and more responsive editing tools
7. some nifty features, like the ability to paint mattes, script synching, better keying,
8. a license that works on both PC and Mac (you get both versions when you buy it)
...would you buy it?
If you were a professional for whom a day saved in the offline editing room is worth $$$, or for whom a few hours saved in an online bay or sound mix are worth $$$, you'd definitely look into it, because it could possibly pay for itself very quickly.
If you don't consider the above and understand that on many jobs Avid is better and would be well worth the money, then you simply being closed-minded or are brainwashed by marketing.
Bruce Allen
www.boacinema.com
lol.... ya know, to me award shows mean jack shit about how good software is. Actually award shows mean absolutely nothing to me in anyway.
Winning an award doesn't mean it was good.... It just means it was better than the other three films nominated.
And I am not interested in any system corporate editing where main
editing decisions are made by producer or somebody else that
does not have anything to do with an artistic creativity.
That's a difference between FCP and AVID.
Lol, you've really outdone even yourself with this one Sanjin. What a joke.
So it seems that FCP is dominating the market for up and coming students and editors. It's logical because new artists (especially students and universities), are drawn towards the coolest offerings - Apple knows that market very well.
Bruce has got upset because he is employed in a company that use AVID
and till today he did not realize that he just think and behave like a corporate
[...]
That's a difference between FCP and AVID.
Corporate editing suites are not growing at the moment but
opposite that only individual and artistic editing suites/packages market is booming.
...that is close to "feeling" of film cutting and they found out that FCP covers their creative needs.
Sanjin, I'm beginning to think that you don't like Avid for some reason
Tell you what, if Apple sold a program called Final Cut Pro Extreme for $1000 more, that had:
1. fewer weird bugs
2. ProRes36 (a nice offline cross-platform 1920x1080 codec)
3. free codecs so anyone could work with your files (not just Mac FCP users)
4. more robust media management
5. ability for multiple editors to easily work on the same project
6. arguably nicer and more responsive editing tools
7. some nifty features, like the ability to paint mattes, script synching, better keying,
8. a license that works on both PC and Mac (you get both versions when you buy it)
...would you buy it?
If you were a professional for whom a day saved in the offline editing room is worth $$$, or for whom a few hours saved in an online bay or sound mix are worth $$$, you'd definitely look into it, because it could possibly pay for itself very quickly.
If you don't consider the above and understand that on many jobs Avid is better and would be well worth the money, then you simply being closed-minded or are brainwashed by marketing.
Bruce Allen
www.boacinema.com
We have both Final Cut and Avid suites and I can tell you the Avid systems are superior. There is nothing wrong w/ FCP, actually there is a lot to like...but the avid systems are rock solid