![]() Taylor has posted a live stream on the FB FCP page, summarizing the summit and throwing his input. This is the guy for any FCP questions you may have. The info is brought to you thanks to Richard Taylor, who is an Apple Certified Final Cut Pro trainer. In this summit, the FCP team answered the audience’s questions regarding the future of FCP, the planned roadmap, new features, and FCP for iPad. Luckily, we have an update from the FCP Creative Summit held in Cupertino this year. That raised some questions regarding the future of FCP. Therefore, after waiting so long for an update that has been recently released, it got a dull feature set. Compared to these two, Apple’s FCP is a turtle. Just to think that Resolve was a pure color grading software a few years ago, and nobody believed it would become an NLE beast. And in the other corner, the Blackmagic team is working insanely fast and efficiently to push tons of new advanced features, making Resolve one of the best and most popular NLE out there. ![]() Premiere Pro has its own dedicated product development Beta cycle and roadmap, which pushes releases like hotcakes in order to boost R&D. well…there’s nothing to be compared, as Premiere Pro and DaVinci Resolve (the main contenders to FCP) release every new and major update almost every month on the clock. Furthermore, when comparing it to the competitors. This is not a secret that FCP’s R&D is moving like a turtle. Luckily, Apple’s FCP team confirmed that this is not the case. Actually, due to the (very) slow development tempo of FCP (Final Cut Pro), many FCP editors, fans, and enthusiasts, were concerned that the FCP will end like Aperture, which means EOL is close.
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