

#How to save to.mp4 in imovie 10.0.6 pro
I’ve got enough data points to be fairly confident that, as of October 2012, Final Cut Pro X has probably outsold Media Composer’s lifetime sales.
#How to save to.mp4 in imovie 10.0.6 series
Two of the four stories are broadcast projects – significant broadcast of cable series at the “Pro” end of the market. Look at the Final Cut Pro X In Action stories. Apple are spending an enormous amount of effort, privately, in outreach to post production facilities and media organizations around the world: the very “pro” market that Eric thinks (and certainly not alone) that they are abandoning. I also took  an initial position that Apple could well afford to ignore the “pro” market (whatever that might be, as there’s no real definition for it) but I don’t believe that’s true. There hasn’t been a wholesale move to any other platform, although I’m highly confident that Premiere Pro CS5.5 or 6 has benefited more than Media Composer or other platforms. Among those whose systems I support or maintain no-one has switched to anything: they’re still on Final Cut Pro 7. If I had to create an informed guess I’d say that more than 80% of Final Cut Pro 6 or 7 (or even 5) users are still working with that software, continuing to make money with it. Right now the vast majority of Final Cut Pro 6 or 7 users are still on Final Cut Pro 6 or 7. That’s entirely credible because not a huge percentage of the 2 million seats upgraded to Final Cut Pro 7. What Apple have claimed, and I have no reason to dispute, is that Final Cut Pro X has outsold the sales of Final Cut Pro 7, specifically version 7, and version 7 only. Not Apple, not me nor any other commentator I’ve read”. The simple answer to that question is “No, and no-one has ever claimed that. Let me address the direct question in the first paragraph:īut, is it true that over 50% of previous predominant FCP users are now predominantly FCPx users? I’m going to leave the last paragraph untouched as it’s personal opinion that I don’t agree with but allow that it’s a position several have.  I bristle at their form of aloof marketing, not just because it’s presumptuous and sometimes wrong, but because it informs me as to what my supplier’s misconceptions are about me, what I do, and how I should be doing it.  They told me that about other stuff they make/have made, and it wasn’t true.

 The thought that I, or collectively, we “will love” anything they make before they even make it, is presumptuous and not knowable. What I don’t particularly appreciate is the hubris exhibited by Apple’s administrators.
