

It has everything which a reliable video-editing app has. Many options for video and audio filters are available, and it is supported to any file type. The shortcut is an open-source video editor software built around keyboard shortcuts. However, the user interface is not so good. You can use the sound library to add audio to the video. It has excellent features like video clip transitions, audio import, narration recording, color optimization, text overlays, etc. There are many input and output formats available for any recording. VideoPad is available for Windows, OS X, Android, iPad, and Kindle. All the tools are available to create a professional quality video.

There are more than 30 effects available.

All these subscriptions have more options and features. sorry for the long rant, just enthusiastic about how things are shaping up with this OS.Linus always wanted to win on the desktop, seems he is getting it after all.The app’s premium version is also available for $25/month, $175/year, and a $ 438-lifetime subscription. Either way, with very few caveats I will be encouraging more people to look at ChromeOS (especially those of the quality and performance of the Pixelbook) this year as Linux support and better Android app support will narrow the deficiency gap for image editing and A/V editing on higher end Chromebooks (it is not yet a platform for gamers unless you use Android games.wait for steam or something similar that Google may be cooking up). The stability, Security and performance have been great for me and the upcoming UI tweaks and capabilities (especially tied to Gsuite for large deployment management) pushes it way above MacOS (MBP) which I relied on for years (but in a work event environment, I was mainly using online tools so switching to The Chromebook Pixel was made easier). My prediction is that (as with the Nexus phone), Google will shake the mantle of (all) Chromebooks being a "Cheap" internet only laptop (limited tool for kids). There are quite a few Android apps that support video editing but with the pending (official) Linux support, the number of apps available for A/V editing will expand significantly. The aggressive feature updates, support for more Android apps and promise of virtualization support (now revealed to be Linux support) made me decide to get the Pixelbook i7 and I have absolutely no regrets. Needless to say, (especially with my company on Gsuite) the Chromebook Pixel was excellent.

I got the i7 Pixelbook based on my initial (year long) test of a 2015 Chromebook Pixel in a highly regulated (Pharma) industry.
