But with the introduction of LumaFusion, owners of some of the best Chromebooks as well as many Android phones and tablets will now be able to perform professional video editing on devices once thought to be glorified netbooks. Google Photos carried out a welcome revamp to its video editor last year, even allowing for multi-clip projects albeit on a single-track. In the past, any sort of decent video editing software has been hard to come by on ChromeOS. For a limited time, though, Google is offering Chromebook users 25% off the cost of the app through ChromeOS's official perks page. New customers to LumaFusion on Android and ChromeOS will now have to pay $30, the same price for Apple customers. In a post on the ChromeOS developer blog, company co-founder Chris Demiris details a lengthy process and multiple challenges in getting a multi-track media editor working on Android, but says in the end that he looks forward to seeing students with Chromebooks try their hands at video editing with LumaFusion.Ĭustomers who were part of the Android open access last year have been upgraded stable release at no cost - those users only had to pay $20 for the app’s license. So, it was no surprise that some users would be bugging its publisher, LumaTouch, for an Android version. It's all for good reason: the app provides all the essential tools and features a visual storyteller could ask for. LumaFusion has continually topped the App Store charts for media editing, even winning iPad App of the Year in 2021.
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