Why do so many of these video editing products try to be web-only? A browser/"the cloud" is the last place I want to be if I'm wrangling 400GB prores blobs... I'm surprised the upside of locking their customers into using company hardware (excuse me, "the cloud") outweighs the inevitable shittiness of having to upload massive video files and try to wrangle them in a web browser which inevitably can't handle high-quality video.
Wow ... an instruction manual for how not to demo!<p>Oh, I think a useful looking color change flashed there in that transition. Or did my eyes deceive me?<p>This is like some dude convincing you he can fight by spinning things around your head in some martial-artsy way.
Well, I uploaded 12 jpegs representing a short video cut that I'am working in and after quite some clicking and trying then to get the LUTs out, I was told I need to upgrade my free plan, 20 minutes lost, but learned something new I guess.
This is a bit confusing. Seems aimed for pros or semi pros, but I find it hard to imagine that the latency and pipeline (sending huge Prores files to the cloud) will work. Hard to understand why they don’t just build a proper app, professionals are not going to use this much in its current state imo.
Looking at the video, it looks like Davinci Resolve's color tab (or Lumetri or whatever) but "in the cloud"? I didn't notice anything that looked like "AI"?
This video editing tool is extremely useful. This appears to be ideal for me. Actually, if it's on the web, that's a plus because I don't have to worry about installing it or what platform I'm using.