Apple's iMovie app for iOS just got updated to version 2.2.7, and it's one of the app's most interesting updates in a while. It includes support for a green screen effect, 80 new soundtracks, support for images with transparent backgrounds, and some noteworthy smaller changes.
Explore the world of Mac. Check out MacBook Pro, MacBook Air, iMac, Mac mini, and more. Visit the Apple site to learn, buy, and get support. Upgrade And Make Your Mac Better Than New. (you can even pay them to transfer your OS and hard drive contents to the. But there are five major reasons why the green screen is better than blue. The budget-conscious push people to choose green screens, because green screens require less light to be thrown physically. Green is easier to be removed when it comes to digital devices. Green screens can be used outdoors for it differs to the sky's color. The profile that is being used is displayed in green text in the corner of the screen on when logging in. Improve this answer. Follow edited Jun 10 '16 at 11:42. That looks like it may be coming from your monitor and not Mac OS. It's possible that when you login a change in the display settings is triggering your.
The green screen effect is by far the most interesting as it lets you replace any green or blue background in your videos with imported imagery. It does a lot to make iMovie more like the real movies.
You'll also get 80 new soundtracks that run the gamut from pop to chill, and each one adjusts to fit the length of your projects. Today's update also introduces the ability to drop images with transparent backgrounds into your videos, which will come in handy if you'd like to keep your logo on the screen for a YouTube project.
Apple packed the update with the following features as well, as listed in the patch notes:
- Add photos as overlays to create picture-in-picture and split-screen effects.
- Choose to hide the border that surrounds picture-in-picture and split-screen effects.
- Instantly return to the edit screen of your project when switching back to iMovie from other applications.
- ClassKit support lets students deliver video assignments to teachers using the Schoolwork app.
- For users with videos in iMovie Theater, the Theater window is now accessible from the ••• menu at the bottom of the Projects screen.
- Sharing to iMovie Theater is no longer supported; save your movies and trailers to iCloud Photos to watch them on other devices including Apple TV.
- Resolves an issue that could lead to a black viewer when previewing your video fullscreen on an external display.
We didn't hear much about iMovie at WWDC: Indeed, most commentaries at the time focused on how Apple had removed one of the only reasons why ordinary users downloaded it in the first place. Before, the 'easiest' ways to rotate videos on iPhone was to download iMovie and then rotate the video in a new project, but thankfully Apple baked that feature (along with many other video editing tools) into the Photos app for iOS 13.
But this update goes a long way toward making iMovie attractive in its own right for users with a bit of an interest in video editing.
I've been an Apple fanboy since I bought my first Macintosh IIsi — complete with color CRT monitor! — secondhand from a friend at college in 1993.
There followed my first color Powerbook in 1996, my cool purple plastic iMac in 1998, my 2003 Powerbook G4 (the first aluminum one, which Steve Jobs introduced with the unforgettable equation 'Power + Sex = ?') and at least a half-dozen other Powerbooks, Macbooks, iMacs and Macbook Pros.
SEE ALSO: Everything you missed at Apple's MacBook event
As each of those products was unveiled, I held fast to one single, seemingly inviolable rule about the technology world: whatever their relative size, Apple was always a more innovative company than Microsoft. Heck, Microsoft was barely ever in the game of hardware design, while Windows was always playing catch-up to Mac OS.
But under the leadership of Satya Nadella, Microsoft has been clawing its way to relevance with surprising speed. After watching back-to-back hardware events — Microsoft cleverly staging its Surface Studio and Surface Dial reveal a day before Apple's Macbook announcement — I found myself writing this sentence through gritted teeth:
I think after today we can say something I never thought I'd say:
Microsoft is more innovative than Apple.#appleevent
— Chris Taylor (@FutureBoy) October 27, 2016
Is the new Macbook a worthy laptop? Sure, it's thinner and less hot in your lap than ever. The fact that you can power it or connect anything from each of its four USB-C ports is neat, even though Apple now runs the risk of being called 'The Dongle Company' for all the connectors those ports are going to require.
About that Touch Bar. That's a really neat emoji keyboard you've got there, Apple! But seriously, let's not sell it short. As a rather too long list of developers demonstrated on stage in Cupertino on Thursday, you can also use this thin strip of OLED screen to scratch in a DJ app, and to make your brushes harder or softer in Photoshop. https://pocketbonus-slot-machine-oe-algorithm.peatix.com.
Power + Sex = ?
Green Is Better Than Purple Mac Os Catalina
But look at what Microsoft just showed us in Seattle. The Surface Studio is the first machine running Windows that I've lusted after since — well, probably since the then-state-of-the-art Sony Vaio in 2003. (That laptop was what Jobs was describing as 'sex' in that 'Power + Sex =?' equation.)
The Studio, Microsoft's first ever desktop product, is what the iMac should be by now — a truly innovative, ultra-thin, 28-inch touchscreen. You can tilt it to a variety of comfortable angles and lean on it, drawing away with a stylus on a massive digital canvas at 1:1 scale.
The Touch Bar is a thin screen below a screen, a novelty version of function keys that doesn't really care about ergonomics. As we saw at the Apple event, you have to hunch over your Macbook to use it.
The Surface Studio cares about ergonomics, and it looks gorgeous, like an iMac from the future. (At $3,000, it damn well ought to.)
This should be Apple territory, and Microsoft just occupied it.
The fact that the rumored new iMac didn't, ahem, surface at Thursday's event just underlined the difference between the two companies. This should be Apple territory, and Microsoft just occupied it.
About that Touch Bar. That's a really neat emoji keyboard you've got there, Apple! But seriously, let's not sell it short. As a rather too long list of developers demonstrated on stage in Cupertino on Thursday, you can also use this thin strip of OLED screen to scratch in a DJ app, and to make your brushes harder or softer in Photoshop. https://pocketbonus-slot-machine-oe-algorithm.peatix.com.
Power + Sex = ?
Green Is Better Than Purple Mac Os Catalina
But look at what Microsoft just showed us in Seattle. The Surface Studio is the first machine running Windows that I've lusted after since — well, probably since the then-state-of-the-art Sony Vaio in 2003. (That laptop was what Jobs was describing as 'sex' in that 'Power + Sex =?' equation.)
The Studio, Microsoft's first ever desktop product, is what the iMac should be by now — a truly innovative, ultra-thin, 28-inch touchscreen. You can tilt it to a variety of comfortable angles and lean on it, drawing away with a stylus on a massive digital canvas at 1:1 scale.
The Touch Bar is a thin screen below a screen, a novelty version of function keys that doesn't really care about ergonomics. As we saw at the Apple event, you have to hunch over your Macbook to use it.
The Surface Studio cares about ergonomics, and it looks gorgeous, like an iMac from the future. (At $3,000, it damn well ought to.)
This should be Apple territory, and Microsoft just occupied it.
The fact that the rumored new iMac didn't, ahem, surface at Thursday's event just underlined the difference between the two companies. This should be Apple territory, and Microsoft just occupied it.
Then there's the Surface Dial — another brave and risky move from Microsoft that seems, at first blush, to have paid off. Stick this smooth little hockey puck on the Surface Studio screen and you can use it as a dial in any number of applications.
You don't need to point to one of Apple's old-school innovations, the trackwheel, to realize how intuitive and useful a dial can be — more so than an extra-thin OLED screen.
Touch Bar:
What used to take you one click in Photoshop now takes you 15.
— Dave Pell (@davepell) October 27, 2016
If Microsoft had thought to promote a piece of DJ software at the Surface event, for example, scratching on that dial would have wiped the floor with Apple's demo of scratching via the Touch Bar in the Algoriddim Djay app. (And I say that as a longtime lover of Djay on the Mac.)
Microsoft's event could well have been titled, 'Let's see how much we can embarrass Apple.' Not least because the company showed off the latest innovations in HoloLens, its augmented reality answer to all those VR headsets. We saw people using Microsoft Paint to construct cool 3D objects in what they saw as real space.
Apple CEO Tim Cook recently opined on how AR is superior to VR. He clearly believes we'll use something like the HoloLens in the near future. Only it's starting to look like Microsoft is walking the walk, and Apple is just talking the talk.
Probably the most innovative use of the Touch Bar, the one area where Apple has an edge on its rival, is Apple Pay. Buying stuff on your computer late at night using your thumbprint — that sounds like a cool idea, until you start to think about the real-world result.
BUT HOW DO YOU STOP ME DRUNK APPLE PAYING, APPLE#appleevent
— Chris Taylor (@FutureBoy) October 27, 2016
Sometimes, the hassle of having to go find your credit card and enter its secret code is not such a bad thing.
It's also shocking to see Microsoft take the lead in presentation style, too. Time was when Apple had the guy who seemed to cut through the tech bullshit as he spoke, who made you lust after beautifully designed gadgets even if you didn't need them.
In these two events, the only presenter who did that was Panos Panay, Microsoft's corporate vice president in charge of Surface devices. Panay was refreshingly honest last year when he said he had made a mistake in the way Surface was originally introduced to the public. It seems he's been working hard to correct that error.
Amplify mac os. Meanwhile, Apple's storied executives spend their time on stage looking just like Microsoft's most preprogrammed leaders. Tim Cook is still stilted, Phil Schiller still sounds like a car salesman, and Craig Federighi is still full of false bonhomie.
Also, when it comes to marketing, Apple has forgotten one of the primary rules of show business: Always leave them wanting more. I doubt that anyone could have wanted to see more of the Touch Bar after the long line of developers demonstrating its wonders at Thursday's event.
The more demos I saw, the more I was convinced that the Touch Bar was a relatively uninteresting novelty item that we'll use way less than Apple is suggesting.
The company's internal technology strategy doesn't even seem like it makes sense any more. If taking the headphone jack out of the iPhone 7 is 'courage,' if we're supposedly all moving to wireless headphones in the long term, what does it mean to still have a headphone jack in the Macbook Pro?
Unveil (itch) (klaatu) mac os. SEE ALSO: No, Apple, killing your headphone jack is not 'courage'
That seems like a question that could have been addressed from the stage. Otherwise you're telling us how inconsequential the aux jack is at one event, forcing us to use a dongle to connect our headphones with one device, then admitting the jack is important enough to include dongle-free at the next.
That approach may speak to power — at least, the power to do what they damn well please, kill whatever jacks and ports they like (RIP, Magsafe) and just expect their fans to lap it up. But it certainly doesn't speak to the tech world equivalent of sex.
On the evidence of the last two days, even Steve Jobs would have to admit that the sex is currently in Seattle. Microsoft has true technological courage — the courage to try selling new things, to risk failure in the marketplace, to learn from its mistakes, to present a coherent vision.
I'm not saying I'm going to dump my iMac and pick up a Surface any time soon (although the fact that I had to wait weeks after its PC release to able to play Civilization VI on my Mac also gave me pause). There's too much in the way of legacy software — and when it comes to functionality, Mac OS X Sierra beats Windows 10.
Os Better Than Windows 10
But for the first time in two decades, I'm giving it some serious thought.