The impressive new versions of Final Cut Pro for iPad and Final Cut Pro for Mac 10.8 have now been released.
[We originally wrote about the new Final Cut Pro software in May when the new software was announced as part of Apple's iPad reveals. This is just a brief resurfacing of that piece to acknowledge that the new versions are now available for download and/or updating.]
If you’re going to stick an M4 chip in a new iPad, you’re going to need some new software to show off its capabilities, and Apple obliged with the announcement of
Final Cut Pro for iPad 2 that draws on all that power and does some rather impressive things with it.
Apple says that using M4 on the new iPad Pro, final rendering is up to 2x faster, and editors can take advantage of support for up to 4x more streams of ProRes RAW than with M1.
Possibly its headline grabbing feature though is Live Multicam, which allows users to capture up to four different angles of a single scene, whether working with their own devices or collaborating with others. Live Multicam connects wirelessly via Final Cut Camera, a new video capture app, which enables users to view up to four iPhone or iPad devices and provides a director’s view of each camera in real time. It allows users to adjust a range of settings including white balance and manual focus, while monitoring recordings with zebras and audio meters. Users can now also adjust ISO and shutter speed, and enable focus peaking, bringing even more power to the camera system on iPad Air and iPad Pro (it will run on any Apple silicon).
Editable preview clips are immediately passed through to Final Cut Pro for iPad and replaced with full-resolution files in the background, so users can seamlessly move from production to editing.
Effectively, it’s a live production ecosystem and it will be interesting to see how people start to use it when it’s released later this spring.
There’s more too.
Final Cut Pro for iPad 2 now supports external projects, letting users create or open projects on an external storage device and import media without taking up space on their iPad. Editors can quickly hand off external projects to another editor or take them into Final Cut Pro for Mac; create new projects on external storage; and seamlessly import high-resolution files and professional codecs like ProRes and Log.
The new software also brings more options to customize projects. Users can dial in their edits with 12 new color-grading presets, choose from eight basic text titles, score with 20 new soundtracks, and add additional dynamic backgrounds to create effect overlays and title sequences.
And anyone who’s also bought a new Apple Pencil Pro now gets to use Live Drawing with support for barrel roll, giving users more precise control of their chosen tool. And with squeeze, users can quickly pull up an array of brushes and settings.
Final Cut Pro for iPad 2 will be available later this spring as a free update for existing users, and available on the App Store for $4.99 per month or $49 per year, with a one-month free trial for new users.
The Final Cut Pro for Mac 10.8 announcement was somewhat buried amidst everything else happening yesterday, but leans into some new AI features and workflow tweaks.
Available as a free update to existing users, Final Cut Pro 10.8 introduces Enhance Light and Color, offering the ability to improve color, color balance, contrast, and brightness in one simple step, and is optimized for SDR, HDR, RAW, and Log-encoded media. A new Smooth Slo-Mo feature takes frames of video and intelligently generates and blends them together, providing high-quality movement.
Color corrections and video effects can now be given custom names in the inspector to easily identify changes applied to a clip, and effects can be dragged from the inspector to other clips in the timeline or viewer. The timeline index also offers the ability to search for and navigate to clips with missing media or effects. And text-based timeline search now includes rather useful information such as reel, scene, camera angle, and more.