Wednesday, April 26, 2017

Avid Studio 1.0

The brand new Avid Studio is designed to close the gap between the Pinnacle Studio for beginners and the professional Avid product line.


Not inherited from Pinnacle Studio, the program has the menu structure - unfortunately. The program sorts its functions among the import-only tabs Import, Library, Movie, Disc and Export.


Among the overall pleasantly hooded hood is, of course, the technology, which has not yet developed further professional liquid: Native MPEG-processing, good support by the graphics card acceleration and background rendering


In the test, the AVCHD material was captured in a pleasantly fast way, and the studio needed less than an hour to display thumbnails. The software initially allowed itself to be significantly longer in order to visualize the waveform of sound. When applying effects, Avid Studio behaved very differently, sometimes the effects had to be calculated for a long time.


The functions offered are aimed primarily at home users. For example, the image stabilization can only be very roughly preselected.


Unlike Avid Studio, which is still highly valued by many users, the Avid Studio does not have any features like a multi-camera mode to easily synchronize and switch between multiple cameras.


Extremely rich are the included additional programs. Not only the usual suspects, such as effect filters, can be found here. A great program, especially for the target group, are, for example, the Magic Bullet Looks, with which even without deepening color grading knowledge can create great looks. Anyone who wanted to buy the supplied filter packages individually, according to Avid about 2000 US dollars to the store counter.


Avid has also made a great deal of effort with the comprehensive documentation supplied - it is exemplary in this price category.

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