![]() The intriguing bit here is that Magix have chosen to bundle a product that overlaps considerably in terms of functionality with their own spectral editor SpectraLayers. I had no problems with this process when I loaded a few test clips and then returned the audio back to either iMovie or Final Cut Pro on my iMac test system. There’s no video preview window but the audio can, of course, be exported and dropped back into your usual video editing environment. You simply drag and drop a video file onto SFPM3, and the audio will be automatically extracted and displayed in the waveform view. Oh, and if you are a video editor who needs a dedicated audio editor for fine-tuning your audio content, SFPM3 can now extract audio from a range of video file formats including XAVC, XDCAM and AVCHD. ![]() The process creates an M4A-format audio file so you can do A/B listening tests and fine-tune your own mastering-style processing to best suit the format. The Plug-In Chain panel lets you apply a unique series of plug-ins to any open audio file, and SFPM3 seemed happy to work with a range of third-party plug-ins as well as its own built-in ones.On a similar front, SFPM3’s Tools menu now also includes options for iTunes auditioning so you can emulate what your mastered-for-iTunes audio will sound like once subjected to Apple’s encoding process.
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