PowerDirector lets you edit using an alternate Storyboard mode. But it’s not the only way to crochet a storyline. We old-fart editors tend to be very protective of our treasured timeline paradigm. It’s not artificially intelligent editing, but in this you can grab a glimpse of that future. Likewise, you can ask PowerDirector to Analyze Content for bits of action you may want to exclude (camera bumps and lighting blips) or specifically include (expressive people and dramatic pans or zooms). You’ll be keen on being able to drop multiple Ins and Outs on each source clip very cool for documentarians laboring to stitch-up a narrative from fly-on-the-wall footage or extended interviews. It's better, even, than a few big pro foundries like Avid Media Composer. But PowerDirector does this extremely well. In most editors, the scaling and scrolling of your workspace, to show what you’re actually working on, is frequently a bit dicey. Stepping into the adult (non-magic) Full Editor, you get an appealing timeline that’s easy to get around.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |