Monday, August 1, 2011

Top three Video Editors for editing AVCHD clips on Mac

After taking the clips by AVCHD camcorders our direct demand is to edit them then or sharing or appreciating. What type of editor should you use? Which can be given the most ideal editing function? Here let's see together.

No 1: iMovie
iMovie '11 (Version 9.0) has been released for a rather long time. It has the ability to make trailers for home movies, more control over audio, instant replays, flash and hold, facial recognition, news themes, and the ability to watch the video on a Mac, iPad, iPhone/iPod touch, Apple TV, Facebook and YouTube.
It now supports the AVCHD Lite format, if your AVCHD can't be compatible with iMovie'11, use professional AVCHD to iMovie tool can arrive this. But this version also features a bug which makes the audio enhance features all but unusable, as the program does not save them after editing.

No 2: FCP
The latest version named Final Cut Pro X
Allowing it to scale and use all available cores for background rendering. It can analyse footage and audio for automatic sorting into groups such as close-ups, medium shots, shots with two people or group shots as well as prepare the footage for quick, automatic fixes for defects such as lens flare, camera shake, rolling shutter, color balance.
Audio can also be analysed in an attempt to automatically remove hums, pops or other noticeable defects. It also features a 'Magnetic Timeline' which edits footage in the middle of the Timeline without knocking any other clips or audio out of place at other points of the Timeline.
Before editing on FCP, you can convert AVCHD to FCP.

N0 3: iDVD
The newest iDVD is bundled with iLife'11
It offers a good balance between working with stock themes and modifying their elements, you get to choose from several options in two categories: icons or underlines when a button is highlighted and the appearance of the buttons themselves. Label styling and custom thumbnails appear in a floating inspector, which seems more appropriate and reduces the clutter in the main window’s panes. It also gets rid of the sometimes-confusing discrepancy between a button label and a text label such as the theme's title.

The exception is when you’re retyping a button label: If the Inspector isn’t visible, a contextual trio of pop-up menus appears beneath the text to choose font family, style, and size.
Hope to import AVCHD to iDVD.

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