[Image courtesy Apple Inc. Click for enlarged view.]
Apple this evening provided a “sneak peek” at the next version of Final Cut Pro – now called “Final Cut Pro X” at the NAB SuperMeet in Las Vegas, Nevada.
The new Final Cut Pro is a bold move – a totally redesigned interface, 64-bit memory addressing, multi-processor support, tight integration of metadata in the project file with metadata stored in the clip not just in the project, heavy use of automation to simplify tedious tasks, and a rethinking of the entire concept of what it means to edit.
I can’t think of any other company that could so totally redefine what a non-linear video editor is than Apple. Since the release of Final Cut Pro 1, each version of FCP has contained incremental improvements. This is a complete restatement at every possible level.
As Phil Schiller, senior VP for world-wide marketing for Apple told me after the presentation, “This is a total rethinking of how we tell stories visually.”
Love it or hate it, our editing life won’t be the same again.
Oh, and did I mention — it has a ship date of June, with a suggested retail price of $299, and will be sold through the App Store (more on that in a bit).
TAKING A STEP BACK
But to look at Final Cut Pro in terms of its features or spec list misses a much bigger point that I want to reflect on for a bit. And it all revolves around a term I used in my first line – this was a “sneak peek.”
This is why you won’t see anything about the new Final Cut on Apple’s website – this is a preview, not the launch. There is still much work that needs to be done on the software.
Understanding an Apple event is like understanding a meeting of the Federal Reserve Bank. It is essential to concentrate on both what was said, and what was not said.
After the presentation, I spoke with Richard Townhill, Director of Pro Video Product Marketing for Apple (who served as the host for Apple’s presentation) who told me that “the purpose of today is to focus exclusively on Final Cut Pro, highlight some of the new features, and give people a chance to see and comment on the new interface. We will have much more to say about both Final Cut and our other applications in the future.”
Final Cut has been rewritten from the ground up and borrows a lot from other siblings in the suite. The audio cleanup and processing borrows heavily from Soundtrack Pro, primary and secondary color correction tools are taken from Color (see the screen shot below), and some of the motion effects techniques are taken from Motion.
However, this does not mean these other applications are dead – simply that Apple is not talking about them… yet.
I was reading posts this evening on IMUG and Twitter, where users were saying: “is it iMovie on Steroids?” I think this is a premature question.
[Image courtesy Apple Inc. Click for enlarged view.]
THIS IS A PRO APP APPLE DESIGNED FOR PROS
After the presentation, I went down front to talk with the folks from Apple about what I saw. And I asked Richard directly: “Explain to me why this isn’t a big version of iMovie?”
Richard replied: “We designed this to have professional features for the professional user. The reason we chose to present it here at the Supermeet was that we wanted the professional user to see it and understand what we are doing.”
As one attendee said to me after the event: “Both a Ford and a Ferrari have an accelerator, but that doesn’t make them the same car.”
Also, what viewers in the audience did NOT see was who from Apple was attending the presentation that did not appear on stage.
Somehow, I managed to sit in the Apple executive section of the hall. In front of me was Phil Schiller, Senior VP for Worldwide Marketing. The head of PR was sitting to his right. The two lead engineering directors, or VPs, were sitting on either side of me. I was surrounded by top-level executives from engineering, PR, marketing, product management — literally a dozen extremely senior executives were sitting in the front two rows.
Apple would not send this level of executive talent simply to watch the roll-out of a product that they did not care about.
SIDE NOTE: I was sandwiched between two senior engineering executives who had as much fun as anyone in the audience watching the demo and applauding. I suspect it was because they were finally seeing the public result of years of behind-the-scenes work.
Another interesting data point. This presentation was almost exactly the same one that I saw six weeks ago in Cupertino. Apple used it then to get feedback from a small group; I suspect they are using this exact presentation tonight for the same reason — to get reactions from a much larger group.
LOOKING AT THE NUTS AND BOLTS
Based on tonight’s presentation several long-standing irritants with Final Cut Pro disappear:
* Rendering is now in the background and much faster because it harnesses the power of the GPU.
* The 4 GB memory limit is gone – FCP will use as much RAM as you have installed on your system.
* FCP X now uses all the processors on your system, not just one and a half.
In addition, a flock of new features were added:
* It supports editing video image sizes from standard definition up to 4K.
* It uses fewer tools from the Tool palette (which is no longer there, by the way) by making the cursor smarter. WHERE you click something determines WHAT you can do with it.
* A lot of existing features are jazzed up (linking and grouping are replaced by the much more elegant Clip Connection and Compound Clips)
* While new features like the magnetic timeline, permanent audio sync and auto-metadata generation are flat-out stunning.
NOTE: Nothing said, or implied tonight, indicated that you would need any special hardware. My guess is that any Mac you buy now will run FCP perfectly. Also, contrary to some rumors, I spoke with Apple engineering about Thunderbolt. This is a system level I/O connection. If your Mac has it, ANY version of FCP – or any other Mac application – will take advantage of it.
[Image courtesy Apple Inc. Click for enlarged view.]
THINGS I WAS STRUCK BY
While the slide show was identical to the February meeting, the demo was not. Randy Ubillos, who did the demo, added more features and additional explanations on effects (see the screen shot above). However, I was told later that the build that was demoed was the same build that was shown in February – and that the application has moved significantly forward since that time.
In other words, what we saw tonight was nowhere near the final form of the application.
I was also very impressed that audio was not treated as an unwelcome step-child. First, the demo paid a lot of attention to setting and maintaining audio sync, however lots of little details were also obvious:
* Sample rate precision in scrolling an audio clip
* Pitch corrected audio scrolling in slow motion
* Displaying waveforms at a size big enough to see what they look like
* Displaying audio levels within the waveform that are approaching clipping (as one engineer near me remarked, “And THAT took us a LONG while to figure out.”)
* Displaying audio peaks for the entire mix that are approaching clipping
* Improved audio cleanup controls, which can be applied or ignored by the user (these look to be borrowed from Soundtrack Pro)
* Adding fades with a keystroke, or by pulling in the top corners of a clip, with four different fade shapes, rather than the limit of two inside FCP 7; these, too, borrow interface ideas from Soundtrack Pro.
THE CROWD’S REACTIONS
In brief, the crowd was loving it. Granted, many of them got well-lubricated at the no-host bar before the event, but nonetheless, everyone seemed to have a good time.
The new interface drew applause, 64-bit support and background rendering had people drooling and the new price of $299 received a standing ovation.
MY REACTIONS
I’ve been thinking hard about this since I first saw the software six weeks ago.
And, truthfully, I’m very torn. There are some features here that I really like a LOT. There are a few that I don’t like at all. But there is a great deal that has not yet been said.
And that, I think, is the key point. The devil is ALWAYS in the details.
Apple has done its usual magnificent job of previewing a new product. But this is only the preview.
I met Randy Ubillos, Chief Architect for Video Applications at Apple, after he presented the demo of the software. I told him that parts of what I saw I liked a lot and parts had me quite concerned. And I asked if Apple was interested in our feedback. He immediately said that Apple is VERY interested in our feedback, that they are listening and want to make this application something that all of us can be proud of using.
I believe him. And I also believe that it is way too early to make any final decisions about this version. There are too many unanswered questions. For example, here are some questions the answers to which are still unknown:
* The retail price for FCP is $299 – but what is the retail price of the other software parts of the Suite? Are we back to ala carte pricing?
* The application will be sold through the Mac App store. What happens to all the great data files that were available with the suite in earlier versions?
* How does FCP X work with existing FCP 7 projects?
* What other applications ship with Final Cut and how do they integrate?
* How many of our existing plug-ins, peripherals, hardware, and other gear need to be updated to work with the new software?
* Editing does not exist in a vacuum, how do we share files, clips, metadata, and project information with other software tools?
* How does it handle media?
* How has QuickTime changed to support what Final Cut Pro X can do?
* Real-time, native video processing is great for editing – however, we still need to encode to get files on the web. How?
As of tonight, Apple hasn’t provided answers to these, or many other questions. As they do, or as I’m able to find them out, I’ll share them with you in this blog and my newsletter.
As one engineer told me at the Cupertino meeting in February, Final Cut Pro is still a work in progress. We’ve seen the outline of the work – the rough cut, if you will. Now we need to give the engineers time to listen to our feedback, polish it up, and deliver the final cut of Final Cut.
ONE LAST THOUGHT
I’ve made a promise to myself to provide training on the new version of Final Cut Pro as soon as possible after the release date.
If you are interested in getting up to speed quickly on the new version – please sign up for my free monthly Final Cut Studio newsletter. As I learn more, I’ll be sharing it with you there.
And as I make new training available, I’ll announce it there first.
For now, I’m going back to the drawing boards. I’ve got a lot of new work to do.
Larry
UPDATE – April 13, 2011
I just posted an eight minute audio review and commentary on the new version of Final Cut Pro X, with Michael Kammes. You can hear it here.
177 Responses to The Sound of 1,700 Jaws Dropping
← Older Comments Newer Comments →Thanks Larry. I agree, the concept where “individual tracks no longer exist” is strange – but inviting. With all of the amazing GUI mojo demonstrated yesterday it seems like it would be an easy matter to just right-click on the timeline and choose a conventional stacked presentation of all audio tracks in play. That, in itself, can be an important visual assessment tool for the editing process.
Hello Larry,
Thank you for a great article and summary of the Final Cut preview. I agree that it’s difficult to reach conclusions about the software without the “devilish” details. My favorite line from the event was “timelines are no longer fragile”. That could save me a lot of time.
The timeline demonstration reminds me about the advantages of working with the keyboard that you taught in your class – speed! I hope the magnetic timeline is keyboard friendly. The overall interface is a welcome leap forward. Regardless of how many times I resize items in the current browser it still looks like 1999 in there.
A question for you Larry… there seemed to be a lot of emphasis on keywords/tagging clips, etc. Did they just need to come up with more to say about the new browser/viewer or is this a key competitive feature moving forward?
Thank you,
TJ
I think metadata will be important to Apple going forward.
Larry
The price point is a little disconcerting. I know $299 sounds exciting, and everyone was blithely chearing, but what about the rest of the suite? I paid $299 for the last full suite upgrade. Are Motion, Soundtrack, etc. going to hit us for $299 each as well?
It will take a LOOOOONG time to ROI another $1K software investment…
These are all good questions, don’t know the answers.
Larry
[…] for the entire standalone application, people– not the upgrade. For a familiar voice, read Larry Jordan’s blog post about the big […]
Larry: As for supported hardware, they haven’t indicated anything. However, my guess is that all Intel Macs would be supported.
Actually, it’s likely to be limited to the same system requirements as Lion (10.7), which is currently Macs with an Intel Core 2 Duo or later CPU.
Apple hasn’t said. My GUESS is that you’ll need to run at least 10.6.x.
Larry
My unanswered questions:
1) Is the viewer eliminated? It looks like it’s sort of merged with the browser in those pictures.
2) I’ve heard a lot of rumors about Apple eliminating log and capture for tape acquisition. Any info on that?
Yes, the Viewer is gone. Merged between a revised Browser and the Canvas.
I don’t know about log and capture.
Larry
Hello there Larry!
I have to thank you for sharing with us your experience at the super meeting. I think that your insight on FCPX is a significant one and for a person like me has a lot of value. Will keep an eye on your new post as they become available.
Thanks again and keep having a great day!
Alvaro
Panama, Central America.
Any idea if there are easy-ease keyframes in Final Cut, and if they borrowed a graph editor similar to Motion (or AE). Even in FCP 7 where they “fixed” speed ramping, it was done pretty terribly.
Also, do those fade types you mentioned work for video as well (like a filmic fade perhaps)? — that would be niiiice.
Thanks Larry!
I can’t speak for all keyframes, but in the demo, the keyframes DID support ease-in, ease-out based on the HUD that appeared on the screen. No idea on how video fades work.
Larry
Hopefully Apple will make archiving projects a new feature in FCP X. It would be great to have something like “Packaging” in Adobe InDesign where I can have it collect all the media, fonts, images, clips, files, etc and put them in one folder or burn directly to multiple disks or blu-ray.
It looks to me like Apple finally absorbed Motion, Color, Soundtrack, and possibly Compressor and Shake into one app like most people have been clamoring for, so we shouldn’t really be wondering where they are or if they’re DOA. One app to rule them all. I’m sure DVD Studio Pro has already seen its final release, though.
My guess is that for the advanced Final Cut Studio features, they may enable an in-app purchase and install those like a plug-in under the effects and motion button on the top right of the timeline. Randy said you can keyframe the color mask, but he didn’t mention tracking, and COLOR has a great tracking tool not to mention the multiple secondaries. I don’t think Apple would buy Final Touch only to kill its best features. I’m sure we’ll see a companion iPad app control surface for the advanced COLOR tools as well. All in good time my dearies.
John:
This is an interesting assumption, however, everything I have discovered so far leads me to say this is also untrue. There will be separate apps.
Larry