Cyberlink Powerdirector 11 Effects Rating: 7,6/10 3035 reviews

For more effects go to this link: https://directorzone.cyberlink.com. CyberLink PowerDirector 11 Series comparison: Ultimate Suite, Ultimate, Ultra, Deluxe and the trial version. PowerDirector trial version vs. PowerDirector full version.

. Pros Fast startup. Fast interface. Fast rendering.

Profile Guide

Tons of effects and transition. Up to 100 simultaneous video and audio tracks. Advanced editing features such as keyframes and time-codes. Blu-ray and AVCHD authoring.

64 bit native code. Uses graphics card acceleration and multiple CPUs. Cons No tagging or face tagging.

No search for effects. Bottom Line PowerDirector offers the best response and rendering speed of consumer video editing software we've tested. The app includes nearly every video effect and output option you could ask for. And this latest version also adds a capable sound editor. Effects and Transitions From the Effect Room, you have access to over 100 effects, from Abstractionism to Zoom Out. You can limit the display to just those in five categories or your designated favorites, but I miss Premiere Elements' search box for effects.

I'd also like to be able to preview the effect on my own clips before applying, as you can in several other consumer video editors. But the choice of cool effects is what's most important.

Sony offers more built-in effects, but you can find thousands more at CyberLink's DirectorZone site. Near-Pro-level Video Editing PowerDirector offers all the video editing techniques you could hope for in a consumer video editor—up to 100 video and audio tracks that avail you of picture-in-picture, overlay, keyframing, and time codes. All of the effects and adjustments can be pegged to keyframes. While Premiere Elements equaled CyberLink s100 tracks, Sony Movie Maker limits you to 10.

PowerDirector offers preset grids—2x2 up to 10x10—and your clip tracks will snap to fill the resulting spaces. This made creating PiP movies much simpler than in any competing app. And none of the rest could preview this type of movie smoothly. Though Adobe's VideoMerge feature took a step out of creating a chroma-key overlay, the result wasn't as good. And on top of a 4-panel grid of videos, the performance in Premiere Elements was so stop-and-go compared to the relatively smooth PowerDirector preview of this multitrack movie, that I can't imagine having to work in another editor with anything less than the fastest PC available today. PowerDirector's Particle room lets you add animated overlays, either of your own images or pre-canned ones from CyberLink. You can also download more from the company and from other users in DirectorZone, or cut and paste graphics of your own in the particle tool.

The feature seemed a bit gimmicky for me, but I was impressed with the amount of control over the particle's motions it offered, and I'm sure some creative types could find dazzling uses for it. Audio Audio tracks in the timeline by default show waveforms, but unlike Apple iMovie, you can't simply turn them up and down by dragging on their edges. CyberLink's WaveEditor is a separate app is newly included in PowerDirector. It shows the waveforms, lets you correct distortion, equalize, generate reverb, and apply a few special effects. It also includes VST plug-in support for third party effects.

And it's easy to create voiceovers with the Voice-Over Recording Room, accessible from a tab sporting a microphone icon. You can easily round-trip the audio tracks from your movie and apply effects and fixes. Sony's consumer editor doesn't round-trip the audio between apps, and in Premier Elements you have to pick through audio choices in its same Effects palette rather than having one tool for all audio operations. Output and Sharing PowerDirector offers a multitude of output options: AVI, MPEG-1 through 4, H.264 AVC, WMV, and MOV. You can also choose a device to output the right format for, such as Apple devices, Blackberry, Google, or Microsoft phones.

You can also target Sony PSP, Xbox, or Zune. Writing to DV or HDV tape are also options. Possibly of more interest is the direct upload option to YouTube and Facebook. I could authorize my Facebook account in PowerDirector and send the movie on its merry way up to the cloud.

The rendering (which took a snappy 6 minutes for a five track movie) and uploading happen hands free from the point you sign in. Very handy for getting that clever viddy up to your 'Friends.'

Disc Menus In our review of PowerDirector 8, we lamented its inability to author AVCHD discs with menus and title screens, but now that's been added, and you can also do the same for Blu-ray, DVD, and Video CDs. You can choose stereo or 5.1 channel Dolby Digital, and a wealth of great looking themes are available for download from CyberLink's DirectorZone site. You can customize menu fonts and colors to your heart's content. Once you're done with menus and titles, it's clear and simple to preview or start the burn. My test Blu-ray played back flawlessly on a big-screen HDTV, and the process to get there was simpler in PowerDirector than in competitors.

Performance On my 3.16GHz dual core with 4GB RAM, PowerDirector started up in just over 13 seconds, much faster than Premiere Elements' 13 seconds, and it also took you right to the editor, as opposed to Adobe's intervening Welcome screen—together, it took PE between 22 and 30 seconds to load—long enough for you to forget a great idea. Pinnacle Studio 14 took 15 seconds, and Nero Vision took 40 seconds between its welcome screen and getting to the actual editor, so PowerDirector is the clear winner in startup.

I should note that I did manage to crash PowerDirector a couple times; it's unfortunate, but it goes with the video editing territory, as I've seen in pretty much all other video editors. In a head-to-head rendering performance test, I used a 4:34 second movie consisting of the same 4 clips of mixed types with the same transitions outputting to 720p MPEG2-DVD format in each program. PowerDirector was the winner, taking 4:07 minutes, compared with Premiere Elements 5:48 minutes, Pinnacle Studio 14's 5:32 minutes, and Nero Vision's 6:25 minutes. Of course if you extrapolate those differences out to longer, higher-def projects with more tracks, they'll be greatly magnified. PowerDirector showed an estimated time to completion, which was useful and quite accurate, as well as showing the time elapsed. Premiere Elements lacked this last bit of information, and Pinnacle only showed a progress bar. Real Power, But Simple!

CyberLink's PowerDirector has all the speed and all the advanced features an enthusiast video editor could want. As the first consumer video editing software to support 64-bit Windows, PowerDirector is taking a lead in the field.

It does trail Premiere Elements in clip organization: Elements offers tagging, even face tagging, where this is absent from PowerDirector. But I'd argue that an app that starts up much faster, responds to actions much faster, and produces the finished product much faster is more important than tagging, especially when all the editing and enhancing tools you could want are present. Its interface isn't as simple as Pinnacle Studio's.

In terms of sheer features, PowerDirector is also second to none, making it our consumer-level video editing software Editors' Choice. I can really say that if you're at all into digital movie creation, it may be the best 100 bucks you ever spend—you've certainly spend a lot more on a system that can do video editing. Read more video editing software reviews: • • • • • •.

Best Answer: First thing to do if you haven't already, is install the latest update - Click on the up arrow icon (in a blue circle) next to the word Powerdirector at the top right of the screen, or alternatively via the menu? - 'About Cyberlink PowerDirector' - Upgrade This will open a dialog box, click on the 'update' tab and see if there's an available update. If there is, click on it which will download a Cyberlink Downloader program to fetch the update. One it's finished downloading, install it just like any other Windoze program. For transitions - make sure that the clips or pictures you want to transition between are on the same track and don't have any space between them, You can zoom in on the timeline to ensure that there aren't any gaps. If there are, either move the clips manually together, or right click in the space and select one of the last 2 options - 'remove and move.' Which will remove the gap and move clips to the right of the selection.

When you do add a transition, it should visually straddle the two tracks. Also, make sure it's of 'reasonable' duration, say, 1.0 seconds (default is set in preferences). For effects, be aware that they are only applied to content in track 1.

There isn't a way to add another effects track. If you're doing all this and still have a problem, on the produce tab you might try unchecking 'fast video rendering', I find that it sometimes gives unwanted artifacts. Perhaps your GPU isn't up to the task of transitions and effects. You could also check to make sure you have sufficient disk space.

If none of this helps, I'd recommend either contacting Cyberlink tech support and/or posting in the PowerDirector forum on their website. There are tons of very helpful and experienced users there. Tell us some more. Upload in Progress. Upload failed. Please upload a file larger than 100x100 pixels. We are experiencing some problems, please try again.

Cyberlink Powerdirector 11 Effects

You can only upload files of type PNG, JPG, or JPEG. You can only upload files of type 3GP, 3GPP, MP4, MOV, AVI, MPG, MPEG, or RM. You can only upload photos smaller than 5 MB. You can only upload videos smaller than 600MB. You can only upload a photo (png, jpg, jpeg) or a video (3gp, 3gpp, mp4, mov, avi, mpg, mpeg, rm). You can only upload a photo or a video. Video should be smaller than 600mb/5 minutes.

Photo should be smaller than 5mb.