![]() ![]() It’s also possible to extract still images from videos. Each video or photo in a reel can be adjusted for exposure, contrast, colour and vibrancy, and it can be trimmed, cropped, filtered, and text added. However, everything is simple to change, with basic re-ordering of clips and photos a drag-and-drop affair while inserting and new content is easy. Footage is brief, zoomed-in on, and centred upon, so sometimes photos are mistakenly cropped, while transitions between them are very basic. ![]() The compilation highlight videos are beat-synced to music, but they’re very simple. The automatic edits can be basic, but you can change the settings and the GoPro Quik app offers a good deal of control. This uploads every photo and video posted to the Quik mural feed at its original quality, and no additional charge - offering a much more effective way of backing up your footage than most cloud storage services. So it’s not really a place to store your favorite content, but only that which you want to turn into an animated showreel.Ī cloud backup service which GoPro promised would be coming became available for Quik subscribers from August 2021. However, saving to the Mural necessitates you creating and titling a new video. If its clever AI doesn’t do it for you, Quik also includes a bunch of editing tools including multi-speed video (really useful for resurrecting otherwise dull-as-dishwater footage), filters, themes and music. ![]() Post it to your mural and Quik auto-edits it into a highlight video set to music. It’s been showcased in the GoPro app since December. Key to this is its ‘Mural’, a hub area that will show you all of your best and your favourite photos and videos. ![]() Quik is out to be your new private content feed. For someone who takes a lot of photos and video, it's certainly better than endlessly scrolling your camera roll to find that one photo of that one time you did that one thing.Quik offers Mural or thumbnail views. Add in the extra editing tools, eventual cloud storage and other features and it seems well worth the $10 a year. And you can organize them by anything you want, from activities you do or places and events, to people and pets or all your favorite food photos. Again, every photo or video you have on your phone that's worth keeping can instantly be sorted for easy viewing or sharing without opening Quik. Creating and updating Murals quickly became addictive. I tested a beta version of the app, though it's available now for iOS and Android. Tap it and you can choose to add it to an existing Mural or create a new one. A Quik "share to Mural" option appears alongside your other sharing options for photos and videos. And you can continue to build out the Mural, too, by instantly adding content without even opening the app. More importantly, Quik made it possible to quickly pull together a group of my best shots into one spot. The clip is just kind of a bonus for building the Mural, though. The tools can be used to edit any other content you have, too. You can leave the clip as is or edit it yourself with the built-in tools I removed some audio that the app left in from one of my videos, but otherwise it turned out just fine. When the Mural is created, the app also puts together a short, shareable video clip from your imported content complete with music and effects. Murals, once created, can be updated with new photos and videos. I wanted to create a collection of my favorites, so I simply selected them in Quik and, in turn, the app imported them from my camera roll and turned them into a Mural. For example, it snowed a lot this season where I am, so a chunk of my most recent pictures and videos are of my family and friends in the snow. Murals are essentially collections you create around whatever makes sense to you. Quik is designed to put an end to the endless scrolling to find that one great shot you're looking for by letting you quickly organize photos and pictures on your phone into Murals. You want to show someone an awesome shot or video clip you took with your phone's camera but it's "somewhere" in your camera roll. See on GoPro Ending the endless camera roll scroll ![]()
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