OS: Windows 7 Professional SP1 (64-bit), Windows 8 Professional (64bit), Windows 8 Enterprise (64bit)
** To continue receiving software updates/upgrades and standard supportĪfter the first year, you must renew your plan annually (click here for ordering annual plan renewals).Ĭomputer: Avid-qualified Windows-based computer First year included with your Media Composer purchase
Access to the Avid video library, Knowledge Base, and forums Technical support by phone-1 call per month Unlimited online technical support-response within 24 hours Unlimited billing and account help-response within 24 hours All available Media Composer updates and upgrades **One year of standard Avid Support includes:
What is Included: Media Composer | Software-Edit SD, HD, and stereoscopic 3D material, Media Composer | Symphony Option 30-day trial-Get advanced color, effects, and mastering tools, NewBlue Titler Pro 1-Create stunning and chic professional 2D and 3D video titles in your timeline, iZotope Insight 30-day trial-Visualize and troubleshoot audio mixes for compliance with loudness standards, EDL Manager-Export timecode metadata, FilmScribe-Export film metadata, One year of standard Avid Support, Avid Dongle From new high-res workflows and AMA media management, to automated media operations and global collaboration, experience the industry’s preeminent NLE.
Avid Media Composer Software with Dongle - perpetual license (9935-65686-06) opens your possibilities even further, simplifying and accelerating file-based workflows and extending real-time production everywhere so you can focus on telling the best story possible. That goes back to, you know, staff well-being, mental health, finding ways to get people experiencing and valuing each other as colleagues rather than just sort of machines who are producing copy, and I think nobody's got the answer to those things.”įind out more on the next episode of the podcast, available on all major podcast platforms on Monday, March 7.Avid Media Composer has long been the most trusted tool of professional editors.
In this sort of intervening period, people have done their work quite efficiently, but actually they've lost that connection, and so the next few months is about how to do that.
“The real loss that people told us was around connection with the company and the company culture and collaboration and communication, and I think that's the thing that people are worried about. Nic says the return to the office after the pandemic is also something which is exercising companies as they try to reconnect with staff after two years of remote or hybrid working. They discuss where so-called robo-journalism could be appropriate to enable journalists to focus on key editorial tasks, despite some fears about the use of AI in news. “How does journalism really stand out from the mass of information on the internet? How does it show that it has value to audiences? I think that's got really muddled in the last 10 years or so, and I think we need to find some way to reset that effectively in combination with platforms, in combination with governments, etc.“
Changing business models, new delivery platforms, attracting younger audiences, different news agendas, the use of artificial intelligence, and trust in journalism all feature in the episode.īut Nic says media companies face massive challenges to remain relevant in a rapidly shifting landscape.
On the podcast, they discuss the major challenges facing broadcasters, as highlighted in a recent report-of which Nic was the lead author. In the next episode of the Making the Media Podcast, host Craig Wilson talks to Nic Newman from the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism about the key trends facing media companies in the year ahead. News organizations must invest in innovation to attract new audiences and retain those they already have, but face doing so against a background of massive disruption within the industry.