When I’m editing, I often want to see it at 90° as most HMD’s are, but often I want to see it see more of the peripheral view, or closer to see details more closely, and the ability to quickly adjust this is great. In FCPX, you can see both, and easily adjust the size of the windows as well.Īnother feature that’s very useful is that you can change the field of view The angle of space viewable from a given lens position., right on the 360 Viewer. More video, or the 360 video, but not both. the way a world map represents the spherical Earth). In Premiere Pro, you can see either the equirectangular Stretching a spherical image into a flat, rectangular format. On the left you can see the 360 viewer with the easy to change FOV in the top left corner, on the right you can see the default Reorient effect, which is by default added to every 360 clip. Here is a broad view of the user interface. Stereo footage and play in real time, in performance mode! The way it has been explained to me, is that since Apple owns and controls the hardware and the software, it’s able to make optimizations with both that really make a huge performance difference.Īnd while it took some getting used to, using the browser in filmstrip mode while scrubbing, is a much more efficient way to get through a lot of footage. Furthermore, I can load in 8k ProRes A high-quality video compression format created by Apple that supports up to 8K resolution. I could watch at 2x, 4x, 8x, with no issues. I imported the footage and from the first frame, it was awesome! I could push play and it would just play, at full quality, not skipping any frames. That’s when I decided I was going to try FCPX. Even at 1/4 quality, even without looking in 360, it would skip a ton of frames, I couldn’t scrub through the footage faster than normal speed and it was just so frustrating. This is a mid-2015 fully upgraded MacBook Pro, the hard drive speed can read and write about 1000 MB/, so in short, while they were not the highest end machines, they SHOULD handle h.264 footage just fine. So I loaded it onto my high end Alienware 17 R4 with 1070 graphics card and on my MacBook Pro. So, I decided the logical thing to do, would be to import the footage in Premiere, make markers on all the good stuff, delete the footage I definitely didn’t want and maybe even make a few cuts to see how some of the scenery would cut together. Preparing to shoot a race sequence with the Jaunt One camera
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |