![]() ![]() Likewise, there's very little reason for you to be on such a low operating system at this point. Of course, considering that most Macs from around 2007 up can handle up to OS X 10.11 El Capitan, I don't believe there's any reason for you to be stuck there, and as this affects only a minority of users, I don't feel it's necessary to preserve the previous version of this guide. ![]() Probably anything around 10.8 Mountain Lion or under. If you want me to rewrite the iMovie HD 6 guide, I will, as you can still run it. If you still have an older Mac, I'd advocate Instead getting iMovie HD 6, depending on your version of OS X. iMovie 10.4, the current version, is far more capable than iMovie HD 6, and therefore, it is fine for a newly minted Mac user to consider themselves equipped for basic AMV editing at "unboxing." ![]() In Apple's current line-up, there is no middle software between iMovie 10 and Final Cut Pro X (also pronounced "Ten"), and Final Cut Express (much like my beloved Adobe Premiere 6.0) will no longer run on recent releases of Mac OS X/macOS. However, in late 2013, Apple introduced current iMovie 10, which has many of the features which would be expected of a suitable Non-Linear Editing software suite being used for editing as we know it in the AMV community. Even then, I would have continued to advocate iMovie HD 6. Many of the removed features so useful to AMV editors were restored in '9-'11. Generally, iMovie '08 was pretty bad, and Apple, under pressure, re-released iMovie HD 6. In the previous version of this guide, the first step was to consider if you had iMovie HD 6 or a higher iMovie. Versus a noticeable speed up earlier in the day with Premiere Pro CS5 directly after going from 4GB of RAM to 16GB of RAM. It's worth noting that before we begin, I was running this on a mid-2012 designed, 2015 manufactured MacBook with an Intel 2.5GHz dual Core i5, 16GB of RAM, and I still found iMovie 10.4 to run a bit sluggish. Icon and window style may vary slightly dependent on your current OS version. Note, this guide was compiled via macOS Sierra 10.12.4 on March 30, 2017. I have extracted the relevant portions and modified them to suit the current iMovie. Large sections of both Kirin's guide and the 2009 guide are no longer accurate or relevant. If the solution is to go back in the updates I wouldn't care if I knew how to do it.Įl Capitan does not support the version of imovie with the yellow star.This guide is a 2017 update of my 2009 iMovie guide, which itself was a heavily modified version of Kirin's iMovie Guide. Has anyone had a similar experience? I would like to be able to access an exclusive imovie forum in Spanish with experienced users. Now this option has disappeared and they cannot be imported from Photos, which is the app. I have opened two incidents in Apple Support and they go around it but they don't solve it for me.īefore, imovie allowed importing photos directly from iphoto. ![]() If I import 10 photos taken with the same camera on the same day, 2 are seen and the other 8 are not. Well, now I do not reproduce the photographs. I have taken the leap forward and upgraded the OS to El Capitan and also the latest version of the imovie. When loading videos longer than half an hour the imovie hangs as if it could not handle them. Whenever a new version of OS or imovie has been released, I have updated them to take full advantage of the features.įrom Snow Leopard to Mavericks and the latest update to the imovie with the yellow star everything worked like a charm.īy upgrading to Yosemite and imovie with the purple star the problems started. In other words, I don't consider myself a rookie. Hi, I've been working with imovie for six years and have created dozens of videos of all kinds. ![]()
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