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Final Cut Pro X Speedtest: 1080P Export & Walkthrough

2011-06-21
what's going on guys Jonathan here with TLD going to do a Final Cut Pro 10 speed test so what I'm going to do is export a one-minute 1080p video clip got a few of them in the timeline right here just messing around I've got a slight little vignette applied and up in the inspector section is where we can make all the adjustments to the effects to the color we can transform crop we can mess with the stabilization rolling shutter so there's a lot of things to dive into let me guys take you to the timeline this transition is called earthquake so we got a lot of new ones kind of fun to mess around with and then this one right here is called directional so definitely an improvement from the previous version now one of my gripes with the older final cuts obviously was it was insanely slow didn't really take advantage of the multicores this one is 64-bit and it should in fact take advantage of all the cores and hyper threading turbo boost all that good stuff so fast forward to the end of the clip it is one minute long we're gonna head up to the top tab and select share and you guys can see there's a lot of options we can go DVD blu-ray we can go straight to YouTube for this instance I'm an export movie then we're agreed with a few options so we can pick from a few different settings I'm going to select h.264 since that's what you would use to you upload to YouTube and then we're going to go to the summary tab that's going to kind of give you an estimated idea of how big the file size 145 Meg's not too bad after export you can choose to open with quicktime send the compressor or do nothing so a little bit and open with quicktime for this video i'm going to do video only since there's no audio really in this timeline and let's go ahead and go to next we are on the desktop we've got my iPhone open just a time it now you guys can time along with me with the video portion so we'll go Final Cut Pro 10 speed test and that'll be on the desktop and we'll hit save and that should start us up got to stop watch going and I thought it was actually going to have to play some music but this looks to be exporting really really fast which is a good sign and if you guys go up to the right corner this is a beautiful thing it is utilizing all the cores all the threads and it's actually using the cpu so before you might see this barely being taxed out with the older versions of final cut this is actually being used right now I'm about 25 seconds in again this is a one-minute clip 1080p at twenty three point nine frames per second we're just about wrapping it up sixty three sixty five percent 18 seconds remaining and it looks like it almost should export in real time which is going to be a huge improvement over previous versions of Final Cut Pro we are on the home stretch now so if you guys pick this up let me know down below in the comments let me know how you like it so far I am loving it so far definitely looking forward to diving in and learn more things with it and we are done so on my clock got 58 seconds so like I said basically real time and keep in mind this is with ScreenFlow recordings so it's going to be faster in real life but I'm doing multiple task and it did utilize all the cores all the threads so that is great if you guys missed the first look I'll post that video right here I'm gonna have a lot more of these coming up very soon as always thank you guys for watching and feel free to subscribe and I'll catch you guys later you
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