
Don’t expect for everything to be 100% perfect out of the box in every sequence, but it gives you a huge head start and will put everything where you need it on the timeline. The only quirk I’ve had to deal with is sometimes crossfades don’t port over just right…but that’s an easy fix. There have been a ton of updates recently in Xto7, and it has been working just fine. For just 99. From there, I just convert it to a good ol’ fashioned FCP7 XML and import it directly for use in premiere (with the appropriate footage folder from the FCP X library). Eliminate the tedious work out of creating all kinds of clip usage reports. The application lies within Audio & Video Tools, more precisely Editors & Converters. which will convert the file to an acceptable Premiere format. They gave me their libraries, and now all I have to do is open it up in FCP X, select the events I want, and export an XML to use in Xto7. This Mac app is a product of Intelligent Assistance. Because the XML that FCP-X exports is not compatible with Premiere Pro, you will need the third party app X to CC by Intelligent Assistance: XtoCC.
#Intelligence assistance xtocc pro
I purchased FCP X to have it handy for times like this, but I had no way to get their work into Premiere Pro for my final edit.
#Intelligence assistance xtocc Offline
Some of our footage from outside is put in an offline edit by other editors using FCPX though.



I’m working on a television show, primarily using Adobe’s creative cloud. Lots of recent updates, much more reliable
