Apple introduces a new Final Cut Camera app for iPhone and iPad. This app will allow filmmakers to have more control over their footage and transmit it live back to an iPad during a multicamera session. The new pro-level app from the company offers “precise manual controls” and functions as a typical standalone camera app.
Alongside the upgraded Final Cut 2 app, which is the replacement for the Final Cut for iPad that was released last year, comes the new Final Cut Camera. Each connected device that runs the Final Cut Camera is captured and controlled via the multiscreen view in Final Cut 2. You may also switch between editing and production in Final Cut 2, which enables you to live-cut your project.
Numerous multi-cam solutions of a similar nature, such as the industry-standard BlackMagic Camera app, are available on Apple’s iOS platform. Live-cutting is a function that rival apps do not yet provide, nevertheless.
Whether using their own devices or working with others, Final Cut Pro for iPad 2 offers Live Multicam, a cutting-edge new way for users to capture up to four different views of a single scene. With Live Multicam, users may watch up to four iPhone or iPad devices and get a real-time director’s view of each camera through a wireless connection using Final Cut Camera, a new video capture application. Adjusting exposure, focus, zoom, and other settings for the ideal shot is simple and can be done directly from Final Cut Pro for iPad 2. Users may easily transition from production to editing by passing editable preview clips straight through to Final Cut Pro for iPad and replacing them in the background with full-resolution files.
Although Final Cut Pro has been available for iPad for some time, using it with the recently released M4 processor brings the video editing experience much closer to what you would find on a desktop workstation. According to Apple, the speed is twice as quick as it was with the previous M1 CPUs. One way that this is evident is that the new iPad can accommodate up to four times as many ProRes RAW streams than the M1 can.
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