Why Doesn’t the Final Cut Pro Timeline Scroll; and Other Imponderables?

Posted on by Larry

Every editor has their own list of features that they’d like Apple to implement. I’m no different. Over the years, I’ve been struck by five imponderable missing features in Final Cut that, try as I might, I can’t get Apple to explain why they don’t exist.

So, with extra time here in quarantine, I thought I’d share my questions.

1. Why doesn’t the Final Cut Pro timeline scroll?

The timeline scrolls in Avid Media Composer. It scrolls in Adobe Premiere Pro. It scrolls in Audition. It even scrolls in QuickTime Player. But it doesn’t scroll in Final Cut Pro.

This has been one of the most requested features from editors for the last seven years. I talk about it with Apple every year. They nod their heads. Then… nothing. Is a scrolling timeline REALLY that hard? CommandPost has implemented this, though it is somewhat unwieldy.

We shouldn’t need to take our hands off the mouse or keyboard simply to move the timeline to keep up with the playhead. There aren’t even any keyboard shortcuts that move the timeline left or right.

Not every editor is comfortable with the imprecision of a touch pad for editing.

2. Why can’t we roundtrip clips or projects between Final Cut and Logic for audio repair and mixing? Or, a corollary, why is there no high-end Apple-branded audio mixing software.

I’m reminded of Avid, where they wasted years unable to send projects between Pinnacle and Media Composer. Yes, we can move projects from Final Cut to ProTools or Adobe Audition, provided we use conversion utilities. But, really, is that the best that Apple can do? Why does any audio mixing need to go through a conversion utility?

SoundTrack Pro, though buggy, was a lovely first attempt at audio mixing software designed to support video editors. It died with Final Cut Pro 7. It reflected video timeline changes made in Final Cut, by changing the audio timeline in SoundTrack. Plus, there was an easy-to-use round-trip process.

When I mention this to Apple, they point out that we can do audio mixing directly in Final Cut. Which is true. But, when compared to the tools, flexibility and power in Audition or ProTools, mixing in Final Cut is like performing self-dentistry. It just isn’t worth the pain.

3. Why is there still no ability to transfer a Final Cut Pro 7 project into Final Cut Pro?

Currently, we CAN transfer a FCP 7 project to FCP provided we first export it to XML then convert it using Send2X, an outstanding utility from Intelligent Assistance. BUT…! That requires that you first export an XML file from FCP 7. There’s nothing that reads an FCP 7 project file directly.

If you, like most editors, had your head down in your project, rather than the trade press, you can be forgiven for not knowing that FCP 7 would stop working when upgrading the macOS. At which point, you were now locked out of all your past projects, with no way to go back.

I suspect that, when FCP X was released, Apple was thinking like an engineering company, not a media company. With developers, as soon as a new version of software is released, all work stops on earlier versions. The past is merely prologue to the new software to come.

Media creators, on the other hand, are ALWAYS repurposing past assets. Editing the same program for different distributors, markets, languages, audiences… Old films never die, they just keep getting re-cut. Media gets reused. It is SO hard to make money on films, producers will do everything they can to make the most of their existing assets for revenue.

Apple is the ONLY company that knows the structure of a Final Cut Pro 7 project file. These files are highly-proprietary which means that only Apple can read them. Even though it is long after FCP 7 was replaced, there are still a lot of important projects trapped in a file format that no one can access, because editors didn’t create an XML file back when they could still open Final Cut Pro 7.

4. Why is it so hard to successfully burn DVD and Blu-ray Discs?

DVD and Blu-ray Discs are major revenue centers for many smaller media creators. Yet, in addition to dropping support for DVD Studio Pro, Apple has been unable for almost two years to fix bugs that prevent Blu-ray Discs from burning successfully in FCP X or Compressor.

Apple is legendary for dropping older technology in support of “the latest thing.” While most of the time this means cables, connectors and protocols, when it comes to optical media, that directly affects how many media creators make money.

Apple has told me that the future of media is streaming and that makes sense because streaming has an essentially unlimited mass market. The reason apps in the Mac App Store cost only a few bucks is because the potential market is in the millions.

But if your business model is creating videos of weddings, dance recitals and graduations, where the total market is measured in a couple of dozen sales, streaming downloads don’t begin to recover production costs. As you know, people will pay far more for something they can hold in their hands, compared to something they download. In their search for the latest technology, Apple killed the business model for thousands of smaller media producers.

At the very least, Apple needs to fix the bugs that prevent Blu-ray Discs from burning in Final Cut.

5. Why does collaboration in Final Cut means schlepping library files around?

Avid Media Composer supports multiple editors working in the same project. Adobe Premiere supports teams, multiple editors working in the same project. DaVinci Resolve supports multiple editors working in the same project. Why can’t Final Cut Pro, which is essentially a media-oriented database, support multiple editors working in the same project?

Instead, we need to create media-free library files and send them between editors.

Developers regularly collaborate and share code bases using GitHub. Is it really that difficult to do the same thing with Final Cut projects?

For example, why can’t we duplicate a project and lock the original. Then, make changes to the new, duplicated project and run a “compare” function that compares the new project with the old, locked project. This comparison generates an XML file with the changes which we can then to another editor to automatically update their edit? Or, if the day ever comes when two editors can be in the office together, why can’t they both log into the same library or project and work together on the edit?

In today’s work-from-home, remote world, teamwork and collaboration are essential. Final Cut seems to consider collaboration an after-thought.

Oh! One More Thing…

Why are the video scopes in FCP still so useless? In what universe is the useful scale on a Waveform Monitor -20 to 120 IRE, when no signal ever exceeds -7 to 110 IRE? Why are the only graticule markers at 0, 25, 50, and 100? Why does the vectorscope only offer 100% and 133% gains, when every standard color chart needs a 266% gain for bars to hit targets?

The FCP Classic team had these things nailed from day one; did the FCP X team simply fire those folks?

None of these are technically “hard,” they just lack interest from Apple to get fixed.

= = =

Let me know what you think.


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35 Responses to Why Doesn’t the Final Cut Pro Timeline Scroll; and Other Imponderables?

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  1. Evan Richards says:

    I’ll second those thoughts, particularly the need to make DVDs and BluRays and mixing audio.

  2. Simon Morice says:

    I agree with your thoughts too. An additional frustration for me is that Apple won’t produce the simple XML files that would enable Filemaker Pro and FCP to talk to each other. Both are Apple assets capable of handling XML really well. Being able to compare an assembly with a script would allow us to do things like calculating instantly whether the director is long or short compared with the script. There are loads of other things you can do too. It used to be relatively simple with 7.

  3. David says:

    Which is very unfortunate because as a professional editor who has used Avid for 25 years, I’ve found FCPX in general to be WAY better and faster…except for a few nagging things, including those you mentioned.

  4. If Apple would have supported FCP7 projects from the get go, there probably would not have been the huge Premiere migration. I would love scrolling too, and maybe have the “timeline” stay in the same spot when returning, and have the marks stay put.

    I composite in FCPX so I would like Motion style keyframe interpolation/smoothing. Avid and Premiere don’t do this very well either. And reverse match frame and better integration with Motion? It was better in 7, right?

    • Larry says:

      Joe:

      I agree. There was no reason NOT to support both FCP 7 and X for a year after the launch – except for executive hubris. One of the worst – and most damaging – decisions Apple has made.

      Run them in parallel and offer transfers capability between the two apps would have totally changed the perception of Final Cut Pro X.

      Larry

  5. MIke says:

    I have my old computer with FCP 6 but I have a bunch of FCP 7 files that I did on another computer that I can’t access. I wish I could find a way to update FCP 6 so I can access those other files to make an XML that I can use.

    • Larry says:

      Mike:

      You may be able to use the XML from FCP 6 – give it a try. There was very little difference between FCP 6 & 7.

      But I agree, Apple should create a way to extract XML files from FCP 6/7 directly.

      Larry

  6. Jim McQuaid says:

    Basically just, “Amen!”

    I still have my G5 running FC studio. But really I have it running still for DVD Studio pro and Encore for Blu-rays. And the burner drive is built in.

    I expected to retire that machine – fortunately I’ve still got space on the desk!

  7. GS says:

    I fully agree, Larry, and still wonder about many of these things. As for the scrolling timeline, even a simple preferences checkbox or timeline control à la “sNapping” would be a welcome addition, if Apple felt that a full switch to scrolling would be a UI issue. I know I’ve had to Undo on more than one occasion because I did “something” out of sight on the timeline.

    • Larry says:

      GS:

      This seems like such a “no-brainer” that I figure there must be either a lack of engineering resources supporting FCP or political obstructionism inside Apple.

      Larry

  8. Philip Snyder says:

    I totally agree re: the problem making Blu-rays and DVDs. My workflow is to output an Apple ProResHQ file from FCP. Then, put that into Compressor and make a Blu-ray or DVD disk image from that. On a recent attempt, Compressor repeatedly crashed at the end of the process when “Create Disc” popped up. The message was “Create Disc quit unexpectedly due to conflict with AuthorScript plug-in.” The Apple tech guy was unable to pinpoint the problem. However, when I left the background picture on the front menu blank, it worked. This has only happened since I upgraded to Catalina.
    Again, no explanation from Apple.

    • Larry says:

      Philip:

      Blu-ray Disc may be “last year’s technology,” but it is a vast money maker for so many producers. Why Apple won’t fix their own bugs drives me nuts.

      Larry

  9. Ya might as well subtitle this article “Why Doesn’t Final Cut Pro have a larger market share?” 😉

    Thanks for pondering the imponderable, Larry.

    • Larry says:

      Mike:

      Actually, the market share for FCP is pretty darn big – just not in Hollywood.

      Apple announced in April 2018 that there are more than 2.5 Million users of Final Cut Pro X.

      Larry

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