![]() r/videography welcomes you to post videos you have made for feedback, though we do have restrictions and limits on what can be posted. In order to cut down on spam posting, all posts made by users without a user flair are held for manual review before publishing. Please read this post BEFORE making a post asking for a camera recommendation. Posts asking questions covered in the wiki will be removed! Camera Recommendations ![]() We maintain a wiki for frequently asked questions - check before you post as your question may already be answered. But for shorter, simpler videos, I could probably just use an iPad./r/videography Discord (click here!) Wiki and FAQ (click here!) Of course, the experience is still better on the Mac version right now, so I'll still stick with the Mac version for more complicated jobs. Now that Final Cut Pro is available on iPad, and it actually works quite well, it will definitely inspire me to try producing more videos on an iPad. I can type words, answer emails, and edit photos well enough on an iPad Pro, so the only thing that requires a Mac is video editing, which I do on Final Cut Pro. And even when I'm not traveling, I don't enjoy working at home staring at the same four walls I usually start my day by taking a laptop and doing work at various coffee shops around town.īecause of my nomadic lifestyle, I am always looking for the lightest work setup possible, and I've experimented with doing work entirely off an iPad. Between frequent work trips and personal trips, I am on the road at least 3–4 months of the year. I feel like we are not too far off from most people possibly getting away with just an iPad and not an actual laptop.Īlthough the term makes me cringe, I fit the definition of a "digital nomad" to a tee. WWDC is just a couple of weeks away, and there's that rumored 16-inch iPad Pro on the horizon. But perhaps the next version of iPadOS or the next iPad Pro will fix a lot of these issues. After I rendered a video, it took me two minutes of digging around before I found the file. The filing system in iOS/iPadOS is also still a bit complicated. This could be annoying for those with lower storage variants of iPads since video files could quickly fill up storage. You must port the media files over to the iPad to make edits. You also can't edit directly off an SSD right now. The process to add the LUT is also more convoluted on the iPad software, although that can hopefully change in the future. On the Mac version of Final Cut, you can adjust the strength of the LUT. ![]() You can either have the LUT on 100% or completely off that's it. ![]() Those who color grade their videos might also be annoyed with how Final Cut Pro for iPad handles a custom Lookup Table (LUT), which is used for color mapping. For comparison, I was editing much shorter, far less complicated videos on a Google Pixel 7 Pro using PowerDirector last week and faced constant lag when scrubbing through the timeline. For a fanless machine that's highly portable and relatively thin, that's absolutely uncanny. Just for reference, I rendered about a half dozen videos during my time testing, and for a 4K video, the rendering speeds are a bit above twice as fast as real-time, so a five-minute clip would render in a little over two minutes. In fact, I have heard peers say their M1 iPad Pro renders faster than M1 MacBook Pro, though I can't vouch for that myself. I could scrub through the timeline easily, even when I put 8K video tracks in the timeline, I could start or pause playback without lag, and rendering speeds were really fast, almost as fast as with my top-tier M2 Mac MacBook Pro. I'm using a two-year-old M1 iPad Pro, and it handled any video clip I threw at it without hiccups.
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