- Mar 7, 2011
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If so, what particular video editing app are you using and why? What other techniques are you using for shooting and creating a YouTube channel? I am intrigued by others doing this.
J.Williams shoots about half or a little more of his content with all the smartphones he buys to show how well the cameras really are, and to show this it is quite possible to shoot a vlog on phones, let alone the Note10+.
There has been a few other YT reviewers that have made a few posts specifically with the Note10+ to show it can be done as well.
Most of them reccomend using something like Adobe premier Rush for better editing if you're going to do everything from the device itself.
So his YouTube is to show how good cameras are on phones? Well then yes it would make sense. The 1-2 you named here don't make up the majority .. since the majority definitely are going to use real cameras if they have a serious channel and do it for a living.
Just because it can be done doesn't mean they do it.
So his YouTube is to show how good cameras are on phones? Well then yes it would make sense. The 1-2 you named here don't make up the majority .. since the majority definitely are going to use real cameras if they have a serious channel and do it for a living.
Just because it can be done doesn't mean they do it.
Just because you don't agree with it, is your opinion, it's not a fact.
Same to you lol
I never stated my opinion was a fact. I simply pointed out the actual fact, that there are serious YouTube reviewers that are actually using mobile phones to record their content. That's not an opinion at all. It is, an actual fact.
I will not be doing any serious video work or vlogging, but ever since my old days of doing heavy still photography work, I've been slightly intrigued by videos. I guess I'm a little more intrigued by videos nowadays with the whole YouTube craze thing. So I may want to dabble in it for fun.
I'm not keen on spending over $10k for "real" camera gear/lighting/recording equipment, so a smartphone for now is sufficient. I know that serious vlogging requires a "real" camera body and lens, plus an external microphone and lighting source for optimal quality. In my film/digital days, I must have spent way over $75k for tons of equipment that could easily fill 2 bedrooms, plus even more on computer equipment.
I watch a lot of YouTube videos. Among many that I subscribe to, Michael Fisher of "Mr.Mobile" channel recently shot an entire video on the Note 10+ just to see if it can be done decently. Normally he uses his real gear.
Here's a link to Michael Fisher's entire video shot with the Note 10+ phone and using the Adobe Rush Android phone editing app:
https://youtu.be/OR3Oq0j5nHQ
By the way, has anyone seen these interesting portable devices below?
Osmo Pocket camera:
https://store.dji.com/product/osmo-pocket?from=menu_products&vid=48141
Osmo Folding 3 folding gimbal for your smartphone:
https://store.dji.com/product/osmo-...0bfwMF_J6z3zcv8nniYhZhoCRSUQAvD_BwE&vid=83691
I ended up purchasing a video editor app called Filmora9 which has many decent reviews as being full-featured for beginners but not too complicated. For a one time perpetual license cost of $59.99, that's not bad at all. Plus it has an interface to export the finished video directly to your Youtube channel which makes it user friendly.
Here's a link for the app which runs on both Windows and Mac. Plus there is a dumbed down version of Filmora9 app for your Android phone which is easy to use:
https://filmora.wondershare.net/vid...a9hj7X-lurkDG9o7w5bxWlt2PQ0PNrj4aAuYjEALw_wcB
Google Play store phone version link:
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.wondershare.filmorago&hl=en_US