Full 64-bit processing and streamlined workspaces, including an improved multi-track timeline, enable you to render more tracks in less time.
It's disappointing that Corel hasn't used the redesigned export interface to fix this issue.Discount on Corel Videostudio Pro X7 and get fast shipping on best promotion today.Ĭorel VideoStudio Pro X7 Corel VideoStudio Pro X7ย is a Windows-compatible video-editing software which provides fast and easy ways to produce high-quality 4K and Full HD videos and slideshows. Casual users may not notice or care, but this is something that consumer software should handle automatically. The bottom line is that it's worryingly easy to have source footage, an editing timeline and export files all operating at different frame rates, resulting in dropped and repeated frames. It's better to select the Same as First Video Clip option instead, but this was unavailable when we worked with 24fps and 30fps footage. This should have made exports much easier, but VideoStudio makes no effort to match project settings to the imported footage, and the controls to do it manually are hidden away. There's a tick-box that lets you create a video matches the project settings. However, these frame rates were allowed for 4K MPEG-4 templates, which is all very odd.
This disposition towards 25fps is presumably because we selected the UK during installation (where 25fps is the broadcast standard), but there are lots of digital cameras on sale in the UK that record at other frame rates. The save-to-disk options appear to be comprehensive but we were mystified to find no 30 frames per second (fps) or 60fps and barely any 24fps and 50fps templates. Destinations include optical discs and social media sites, and profiles for Xbox, PS3 and PSP. The export options have been redesigned to make them easier to use, although the available options are largely unchanged.
The Share tab is better laid out than before, but where are the 24fps and 30fps templates? It's switched off by default, though, and most users are unlikely to find or make sense of it. To its credit, VideoStudio has a comprehensive proxy editing mode, whereby footage beyond a specified resolution is converted to a lower resolution to improve preview performance, reverting to the originals for export. All of this footage contains 1080-25p AVC video, and other editors are much more consistent in their ability to handle them.
Some formats are inevitably more demanding than others, but it's odd that X7 was able to deliver smooth playback of seven simultaneous streams in AVCHD format, but two streams from a Panasonic G6 (with a MP4 file extension) and only one stream from a Canon EOS 70D (in QuickTime format). Preview performance also varied widely depending on the type of source footage. There was a discernible delay in responding to our input, typically of less than a second but sometimes as much as four seconds for more complex projects.
Sadly, the move to 64-bit code hasn’t resolved various issues we've noticed before about VideoStudio's performance. We also saw render times fall by up to 48 per cent, although our test results varied widely from project to project. VideoStudio Ultimate X7 played seven simultaneous AVCHD streams on our Intel Core i7 870 test PC compared to five streams in X6.
VideoStudio Ultimate X7 is one of the last editors to make the jump, but it's better late than never. The move to 64-bit code brings a significant boost to preview performance and export times. There's no shortage of creative effects and animated titles and graphics