
EditReady is a video converter for perfoming miscelanous video transcoding. It is mostly designed for professionals who use complex applications like Avid Media Composer, Appli iMovie, FCPx, or Apple ProRes.
It comes wrapped in a typical macOS interface, with small buttons, a right-panel and a large working area. Overall, it looks like some extra touches are needed, especially on buttons design and font style.
As per its functionalities, it embeds lots of various and useful functions. It has options to view and edit metadata, and a burn-in timecode, with custom text and images.
Furthermore, it lets users rewrap or transcode media into edit-optimized masters and proxies. Also, it automatically pareses camera media and medata and converts to high quality formats. It supports QuickTime and MP4 camers, MXF based formats, MTS, M2T, and Blackmagic RAW.
Last but not least, individuals are able to import images with alpha channels in order to apply complex bugs or watermarks.
To summarize, EditReady is capable of performing multiple and diverse transcoding operations. It seems overpriced, and at times some functions are limited, but you should give it a try.
v2.7 [Mar 26, 2021]
-Apple Silicon (m1) support
-Better multifile detection for Davinci Resolve outputs
-Fixes audio bug in Sony A7S III
-Fixes bad a/v sync for some Youtube downloads
-Improves a/v sync for files recorded by third party applications (Zoom, etc)
-Fixes flipped images on ProRes RAW decodes (only some formats supported)
-Fixes UI glitches on macOS Big Sur
-Fixes hang in command line with --showUserInterface flag
-Better support for joining BRAW files
-Fix for ProRes 4444 handling on macOS Catalina
-Better support for very long HEVC files
-Correct an issue that could have prevented SD cards from being ejected after transcoding
-Miscellaneous DNxHD compatibility enhancements
-Support for GoPro spans when a card contains more than 100 clips
-Metadata improvements when working with Final Cut Pro X