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summary
- Premium video recording is finally coming to Android with the Blackmagic Camera app, potentially offering near-pro-level features for budding videographers.
- Blackmagic, known for DaVinci Resolve, offers a free app for Android smartphones that syncs with your desktop to facilitate clip transfer between devices.
- Filmic Pro, once the gold standard for Android video recording, may soon face competition from the free Blackmagic Camera app.
If you record videos on your Android smartphone, you’re probably used to being disappointed. For years, software support for cameras in the Android ecosystem has been a complex web of inconsistencies and incompatibilities. Also, the third-party apps available are more of an afterthought than a properly developed application. If you need to record video on your phone, you’re almost certainly better off using your iPhone. But all that may be about to change thanks to Blackmagic’s new app previewed this week at NAB Las Vegas.
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Premium video recording comes to Android
Blackmagic is the company behind the extremely popular (and free) DaVinci Resolve nonlinear video editing software. In September, the company released Blackmagic Camera, a free app for iPhone, and now it’s finally coming to Android (via MrAlexTech). Budding Android videographers, don’t get your hopes up just yet. There’s no word on when it will be available to the public or which phones it will be available on.
Nothing can be seen in the five-minute video posted on Sunday, but the app can be seen running on a Samsung S24 (it’s unclear which one) and a Google Pixel 8 Pro. The app will initially be available only on a small number of mobile phones. That’s because software support for third-party cameras on Android is a bit terrible. Phone manufacturers often lock out the most powerful features of their cameras from third-party developers, forcing them to deliver an inferior experience. What’s worse is that even though there are standard APIs for OEMs to implement on their phones to make camera hardware more accessible to developers, OEMs are not obligated to do so.
For telephones intention With support for the Blackmagic Camera app, users can expect to have near professional-grade apps. I’m not qualified to explain in detail all the features available in this app (see Reddit), but the video shows that you can change the lens, FPS, shutter speed, ISO, white balance, and tint. And of course, it syncs with DaVinci Resolve on your desktop, making it easy to move clips between devices.
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At the moment, if you want to do professional video recording on your Android, you have to shell out some money. Filmic Pro was the gold standard for a while, from his $15 one-time purchase to his $5 per week subscription service. Many camera app developers are probably sweating right now because the Blackmagic Camera app will be free. If you’re new to smartphone cameras, read about OIS and EIS image stabilization.
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