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Download editready update8/30/2023 ![]() There is, however, a tutorial guide on Vimeo that explains how it works. Renaming files is easy with EditReady, as is adding metadata, but it’s a bit a hidden feature that’s not well explained in the user guide. You can install Avid’s codecs for free, independent of any other Avid products, by downloading it from. That’s - as Divergent Media’s Colin McFadden told me - because Divergent Media doesn’t ship a built in DNxHD codec, but rather rely on the Avid provided codec. If you don’t have Avid products installed on your system, you’ll see the DNxHD codecs greyed out. You would use pass-through ‘transcoding’ if you wanted to add metadata, colour grade (more on that later), or change framerate, for example. ![]() There’s also the ability to pass-through video as well as audio formats. EditReady supports all ProRes and DNxHD flavours and H.264. Now that the app is out in the world, our next update towards the end of the summer will be to add in more natively supported camera formats.” The export formats support is fine even in this first version. I asked the developers about future import formats and their response was promising: “In version 1.0 we focused in on QuickTime to QuickTime conversions. As expected, RED clips were not recognised. On the other hand, a GoPro file first converted in GoPro Studio Pro to the intermediate Cineform format was recognised without a problem, even if it did not play in the QuickTime player. For example, I tried dropping an AVCHD file - the bundle OS X makes of it - and EditReady didn’t recognise it, although it did play in the QuickTime player. This first version of the app supports only those formats that you can play in the QuickTime player but that’s not an accurate claim. Let me start with its support for clip formats. ![]() As far as the other features are concerned, EditReady is nice too. If you have a lot of ProRes files, you’ll want EditReady - if not for anything else, then surely for its speed. Even when I had Episode running with two extra nodes, EditReady was faster. I compared it to Red Giant’s BulletProof, Squeeze 9 and Episode Engine and it’s a whole lot faster than any of those. It’s transcoding process to ProRes is fast. EditReady looks simple but is pretty powerful - but that’s not why you will want to have a copy.ĮditReady has one huge major appeal. It supports metadata and custom file naming. EditReady transcodes media from any QuickTime compatible format to one of the ProRes or DNxHD formats, as well as to H.264. Divergent Media recently released its EditReady tool, a fast transcoding utility for video production pros.
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