So, I wonder how many of you remembered that FCPX turned 2 years old on June 21st.
Yup, That’s right 2 years with a number of updates and the soon to be arriving “NewMacPro” people are wondering when the updates will happen, even though Apple has confirmed that there is an official update to FCPX arriving at approximately the same time as the new desktop. Phil said it on stage, Apple focus on it in their PR messaging but now people are taking pictures of MacPro Screens on Apple.com and spreading them across social media.
Metadata is the new black
I am guessing most of these people did not watch the WWDC Keynote, or more specifically, the part where Craig Federighi showed the same Metadata Tagging like FCPX has had for almost 2 years at the FINDER level of OSX Mavericks. I think it is funny how that same type of info tagging was belittled and berated when FCPX first came out 2 yrs. ago in June 2011?
Yet Apple’s engineers sought to bring it full bore into the mainstream of OSX directly, wisely so I might add, so that now the power that I referred to in the first releases of FCPX have moved forward to the point that we will be using that power invisibly while you are working. Isn’t this what we all want, instead of blindly looking around the plethora of available drives with failed searches because we have all turned off journaling for external drives.
What does this mean?
We all watched as Apple took nothing short of a “ass-whoppin” in the media and on the internet about the changes to FCP when FCPX came to market. It took Apple months to add back some really basic functionality like outputting split audio tracks or using professional level monitoring and output for the Pro User. My Macworld.com review of FCPX was one of the more civil diatribes, while my comments on CreativeCow.net were something else altogether.
Move forward 2 years and that same Phil Schiller is talking live onstage talking at WWDC about a new MacPro and in the same breath is talking about FCPX being updated. The Metadata tagging originally featured in FCPX, is shown in a fully operational manner at the Finder Level in demonstrations of the next generation of the OSX.
I think that this means Apple may have something else in mind, for I see a workstation that functionally remembers where all my content is, keeps track of all of my projects, media and the assorted files that traverse my desk as a working pro. No more lost images or captions, client logo’s stay organized on the server and available instantly, content pre-identified by the associated metadata. { I wonder will Adobe meta-tags from Photoshop and Lightroom might be seen by OSX at some point }
Hmmm.
Apple’s skill is persuading the people that use their products and services to change their behaviour.
Once people see the benefits of tagging documents in OS X Mavericks they’ll be ready to tag parts of documents. This is on the path towards the day the need for documents and file systems will go away – replaced by user-facing tags and stored as metadata behind the scenes.
Once Apple demonstrates how tags will work amongst workgroups (and groups of friends and within families), and thoughout all backups, metadata will have won the day!
@Alex4D
I agree Alex, this could be a huge difference for those editors that think they understand workflow. Since Apple is going to force organization on everyone via Mavericks, I see the editing workforce embracing the new OS and Machine for that purpose alone.