Memory Editor For Mac

Work at a faster clip.

  1. Juno Editor 2.3 is a preset editor and library for the Roland Juno 106 and MKS7 Synthesizers. Save, organize and edit presets via a simple MIDI connection. Presets can be created from scratch or received from the synthesizer's inner memory, and are stored as.jep documents or.syx files on.
  2. Memory Craft 500E Embroidery Editor www.janome.com W H A T S N EXT Page 2 13. Press Enter on keyboard to insert design in center of hoop. Move design to top of tree.
  3. The world’s #1 text editor. It's powerful, fast, secure, and loaded with helpful features like integrated FTP and file compare. Programmers, developers and other users thrive in UltraEdit for text, HEX, and many other languages. Windows, Mac, Linux.
  4. Download iHex - Hex Editor for macOS 10.6.6 or later and enjoy it on your Mac. ‎iHex - Hex Editor A fast and clever hex editor, checksum utility, file information viewer. IHex does not keep your files in memory. You won’t dread launching or working with iHex even on low-RAM machines. Open a huge file, scroll around, copy.
  5. ArtMoney is a memory (file) editor. This is cheating program you can use for all games.ArtMoney can make a troublesome game easier to win by helping you find thememory address where a desired quantity (like amount of money) is located soyou can change that quantity.

With its modern Metal engine, Final Cut Pro allows you to edit more complex projects and work with larger frame sizes, higher frame rates, and more effects — all at blazing speeds. And it’s built to harness the extreme power of the new Mac Pro for next-level performance.

Shotcut is a free and open source video editor for Windows, Mac and Linux. Based on MLT, it features cross-platform capabilities in conjunction with the WebVfx and Movit plugins. Based on MLT, it features cross-platform capabilities in conjunction with the WebVfx and Movit plugins.

Accelerated performance with Metal

Metal dramatically accelerates graphics tasks like rendering, compositing, real-time effects playback, exporting, and more. When you’re working on a system with an eGPU attached, you can select which GPU to use — internal or external — for peak performance.

Optimized for the all-new Mac Pro

For the ultimate editing experience, run Final Cut Pro on the world’s fastest Mac, the new Mac Pro. Final Cut Pro takes advantage of all the GPUs in Mac Pro and uses multithreading to spread tasks across up to 28 cores. And when equipped with the optional Afterburner card, Mac Pro delivers the fastest ProRes performance ever. So you can do things like edit video, create motion graphics, and color grade in groundbreaking 8K resolution. All at maximum velocity.

The tools you need. From start to finishing.

With innovative features and an intuitive design, Final Cut Pro accelerates post-production. So editors can create and deliver at the speed of thought.

The Magnetic Timeline allows you to easily experiment with story ideas by moving and trimming clips without collisions or sync problems. Use Compound Clips to bundle separate video and audio clips into a single movable package, create Auditions to try out multiple takes in the timeline, and use Synchronized Clips to align video with second-source audio automatically. Color coding makes it easy to identify different types of content, with the ability to customize the look of your timeline while you edit.

Final Cut Pro offers the most advanced organizing tools of any professional video editing application. Easily tag entire clips or clip ranges with metadata for searching, and create Smart Collections that automatically collect content according to a set of custom criteria. Skimming lets you efficiently browse hours of material in a more visual way, so you can identify what you want in seconds.

Create 2D and 3D titles right in Final Cut Pro, apply and modify filters, and use the built-in chroma key for high-quality green- and blue-screen effects. Expand on the built-in effects with thousands of third-party tools and templates. And for even more control, use Motion to create stunning titles, transitions, generators, and effects you can access from Final Cut Pro.

Final Cut Pro lets you edit multichannel audio using built-in tools for removing background noise and optimizing levels. Adjust multichannel audio files in the timeline or open the inspector for more information and options. Choose from dozens of bundled plug-ins for audio compression, EQ, and more — or send to a professional audio application like Logic Pro X for advanced audio mixing.

Quickly encode video using the power of multicore CPUs and high-performance GPUs. Take advantage of presets to deliver ultra-high-quality masters or files optimized for iPhone, iPad, Apple TV, and websites like YouTube and Vimeo. And batch exporting makes it fast to deliver multiple files or projects in multiple formats. You can also use Compressor to create custom export settings that appear right in Final Cut Pro.

Multicam

The industry’s most advanced multicam editing lets you automatically sync up to 64 angles of video with different formats, frame sizes, and frame rates. View up to 16 angles at once in the Angle Viewer. And open the Angle Editor timeline to move, sync, trim, add effects, or color grade individual clips.

Video noise reduction

Improve the look of archival and low-light images with powerful noise reduction tools that reduce or eliminate grain and video noise. Simple controls let you quickly adjust intensity, and it’s easy to change processing order by dragging the effect in the inspector.

Motion and Compressor

Create stunning effects and sweeping graphics with Motion, including studio-quality 2D and 3D titles you can open and adjust in Final Cut Pro. Use Compressor to create custom export settings and streamline delivery of your movie to the iTunes Store. And because Final Cut Pro, Motion, and Compressor all share the same Metal architecture, you’ll experience blazing performance and consistent rendering across applications.

Compressor

Advanced color grading.
Every pixel closer to perfection.

Text

Professional color grading tools are built into Final Cut Pro, including a dedicated color inspector with color wheels, color curves, hue/saturation curves, and keyframes to adjust corrections over time. You can work with High Dynamic Range footage on recent Mac systems that display an extended range of brightness. Or connect the all-new Pro Display XDR for the ultimate HDR experience.

Unique color wheels improve on traditional controls by combining hue, saturation, and brightness into a single, simple interface.

Color and luminance curves allow ultrafine level adjustments with multiple control points to target specific color and brightness ranges.

Sample a color with an eyedropper and change just the hue, saturation, or luminance of a specific color within the image.

Work closer to reality than ever before with HDR video. Import, edit, grade, and deliver incredibly lifelike images with Final Cut Pro. High-resolution scopes reflect HDR brightness levels as you edit, and tone mapping lets you easily convert HDR to Standard Dynamic Range output for broadcast. You can view beautiful HDR content on a wide range of Mac computers that use the reserve brightness of the display to show an extended range of light levels.

HDR on Pro Display XDR

View High Dynamic Range video the way it was meant to be seen. The gorgeous new Pro Display XDR delivers 6K resolution and 1000 nits of sustained brightness for HDR editing, grading, and delivery with Final Cut Pro. And setup couldn’t be simpler — just connect a single Thunderbolt cable from your Mac to Pro Display XDR to use it as an additional display or video monitor.

ProRes RAW. The flexibility of RAW with the performance of ProRes.

Import, edit, and grade pristine video with RAW data straight from your camera sensor. Work with ProRes RAW files and experience all the creative advantages of RAW with the seamless performance of ProRes. And with Mac Pro and the Afterburner card, you can edit in ProRes RAW faster than ever before.

ProRes performance

Remarkably smooth playback and real-time, multistream editing are part of the ProRes RAW package. The format is optimized for macOS and the latest Mac computers, allowing you to render and export faster than with other RAW formats. And since ProRes RAW files are smaller than standard formats, you can fit more footage on every card.

Memory Editor For Macbook Air

View the Apple ProRes RAW White Paper

RAW flexibility

Work with untouched image data directly from your camera sensor. RAW files provide maximum flexibility for adjusting the look of your video while extending brightness and shadows — an ideal combination for HDR workflows. And ProRes RAW preserves more of the original image data, making it a great format for archiving.

Learn about ProRes RAW partners

Workflow extensions. Extend the power of Final Cut Pro.

Work directly with powerful third-party applications — without leaving Final Cut Pro.

Use the Frame.io extension to simplify review and approval. Drag and drop clips and timelines, jump between markers, and review comments and annotations in real time from your Frame.io collaborators.

The Shutterstock extension lets you browse stock photos, videos, and music while you edit. Drag and drop watermarked files into the timeline and easily replace them later with licensed, high-resolution versions.

Connect directly to CatDV and KeyFlow Pro media asset management systems so you can browse, mark, and transfer files from within the Final Cut Pro interface.

360° video. Take your work further. In every direction.

Final Cut Pro includes a complete toolset for importing, editing, and delivering both monoscopic and stereoscopic 360° video.

360° editing

Import and edit 360° equirectangular footage in Final Cut Pro. Open the 360° viewer to see a headset view of your footage, and take advantage of simple tools for changing orientation, straightening the horizon, removing camera rigs, and more.

360° graphics and effects

Easily add 2D and 3D titles to your 360° video and apply blurs, glows, and other 360° effects. Or create more advanced 360° motion graphics in Motion, then add them directly to your Final Cut Pro project. You can even add 360° video to non-360° projects, using the Tiny Planet effect to create interesting spherical looks and animations.

VR headset playback

Watch your 360° video in real time with a VR headset like the HTC Vive Pro. Choose to mirror the headset view in Final Cut Pro, or turn off mirroring to watch video in the headset while independently controlling a separate view on your monitor.

Closed captions. Open to all.

Final Cut Pro includes an intuitive, comprehensive set of tools for closed captioning in a variety of formats, without the need for expensive third-party software or services. You can create, view, and edit captions within Final Cut Pro, and deliver them as part of your video or as a separate file.

Add an existing caption file to your project and Final Cut Pro automatically connects each caption to the corresponding video or audio clip in your timeline.

Type captions from scratch — in multiple languages and formats — and watch the text play back in real time right in the viewer.

Attach captions to connected audio or video clips in the timeline so they move in sync with your edit. It’s easy to adjust text, color, location, and timing in the captions inspector. And the enhanced Timeline Index lets you quickly search and select captions, or use captions roles to instantly switch between different versions.

Export captions in the industry-standard CEA-608, iTT, or SRT formats. Or burn them directly into your video. When delivering, you can choose to embed caption metadata in your video file or create a separate sidecar file. Captioned videos can be shared directly to YouTube and Vimeo. And you can send your project to Compressor to include captions in a batch or an iTunes Store package.

Step up from iMovie to Final Cut Pro.

iMovie is the easiest way to start making movies. And when you’re ready to ramp up production, it’s effortless to switch to Final Cut Pro from iMovie for iOS or iMovie for Mac. You’ll cut faster and more precisely with advanced editing tools, improve the look of your projects with third-party plug-ins, and easily integrate video recorded with professional cameras from RED, Sony, Canon, and more. You can import your iMovie projects right into Final Cut Pro, so you won’t miss a beat — or a cut — when you upgrade.

Third-party tools to make your workflow flow.

Choose from thousands of custom transitions, titles, and motion graphics. Work directly with powerful applications through workflow extensions in Final Cut Pro. And take advantage of other third-party tools for advanced tracking, EDL and AAF interchange, and more.

Five amazing apps.
One powerful collection.

Editor

Unleash your creative potential with the Pro Apps Bundle for qualifying college students, teachers, and education institutions. Get all five professional applications for video and music creation at a special price — including Final Cut Pro X, Motion, and Compressor, along with Logic Pro X and MainStage.

It happens to every Mac (and every other kind of PC): The system slows down when it’s doing lot of things at once. If this happens to your Mac more than you’d like, though, your system might need more RAM.

Adding more RAM to your Mac—if you can add more RAM—is one of the eaiest ways to improve your Mac’s performance. The crucial question is, How much more RAM do you actually need? Macworld Lab ran benchmarks on a couple of Macs at different RAM configurations and analyzed the results. Our conclusion: The impact of more RAM depends on the types of tasks your Mac performs. In some situations your Mac may benefit from having as much RAM as you can afford; in others, you’ll be fine with the stock configuration.

But before we dive into the results, let’s take a brief look at what RAM is and why it’s important to your Mac. (This article focuses exclusively on the impact of RAM on system performance, but of course RAM isn’t the only component that affects performance. Macworld Lab is currently working on tests that will allow us to take a similar look at how other components—storage, graphics, and CPU—affect performance.)

Memory Editor For Mac

What is RAM?

Random Access Memory is a temporary storage medium that your Mac’s CPU uses for fast access to data it’s processing. The CPU can access data contained in RAM much faster than it can data held on long-term storage devices like traditional hard drives and even solid-state drives.

Suppose that you want to work on a text file. Your computer will copy the text file—and the necessary information for the text editor you’re using—into RAM. Next, let’s imagine that you open Photoshop, while leaving the text editor open. Photoshop also loads data into RAM; so at this point, your Mac will have two apps loaded into RAM. The more apps you open without closing down other ones, the less available RAM will remain available to accommodate other apps and perform other functions.

When your RAM is full and another app needs to use some of the space, something’s got to give. In this case, paging will occur: Your Mac’s CPU will move data that isn’t in active use from RAM to a swap file on your storage device (hard drive or SSD), and the new data will go into RAM. Paging can make a computer that seemed fast a second ago slow to a crawl. The more RAM your system has available, the less your CPU will rely on paging

Can I upgrade my RAM?

Apple adopts a locked-down approach toward many of its Macs, including the MacBook Air and the Retina MacBook Pro. On these Macs, RAM is factory-installed directly on the motherboard as onboard memory. As a result, you can’t upgrade the system’s RAM later; on the other hand, this approach allows Apple to make laptops slimmer and more portable. In Apple’s current computer lineup, the Mac Pro, the 27-inch iMac, the Mac mini, and the non-Retina MacBook Pro have user-upgradable RAM.

Crucial, Kingston, and Tiger Direct offer online tools designed to tell you whether your RAM is user-upgradable, and to help you find the correct RAM for an upgrade. NewEgg has a memory finder. OWC offers an online RAM upgrade guide.

Benchmarks: The effects of RAM

The more RAM a Mac has, the better it performs—but how much improvement will you see? To find out, we ran tests, including our Speedmark 8 benchmarking suite, on two computers equipped with three levels of RAM: 4GB, 8GB, and 16GB. The first system we tested was a mid-2011 iMac with a 3.1GHz Core i5 processor and a 1TB hard drive. The second was a late-2011 MacBook Pro with a 2.4GHz Core i7 processor and a 750GB hard drive. Both systems carried standard congifurations and originally came with 4GB of RAM.

Photoshop CS6 actions test
100MB file
  • 4GB 141.3 seconds
  • 8GB 98.7 seconds
  • 16GB 98.0 seconds
250MB file
  • 4GB 265.0 seconds
  • 8GB 130.3 seconds
  • 16GB 122.7 seconds
500MB file
  • 4GB 795.6 seconds
  • 8GB 330.3 seconds
  • 16GB 178.0 seconds
Results are in seconds. Smaller results/shorter bars are better.

Our Photoshop test consists of performing a series of actions on a file. As the test results show, the effect of additional RAM on performance depends on the file sizes you typically work with. It’s possible to see a diminishing return or a huge benefit from extra RAM.

Memory Editor For Mac

Photoshop is a perfect example of an app that can take advantage of having a large amount of RAM available. It even lets you specify a maximum allowable amount of RAM for the app to use. Otherwise, Photoshop might eat your entire RAM pie, leaving just the crumbs for your other applications.

VMware-PCMark on Windows 7
  • 4GB 1260
  • 8GB 3456
  • 16GB 3657
Results are scores. Larger results/longer bars are better.

We ran Windows 7 using VMware with a relatively light set of tests. Virtual machines can require a lot of RAM, but not always. We didn’t see any substantial improvement when allocating more than 4GB to the virtual machine; however, your experience may be different if you have a lot going on. The same factors that go into deciding how much RAM you need also apply to virtual machines—so if you do heavy lifting in your virtual OS, you’ll need the RAM to back it up.

Photo Editor For Mac

Mathematica
  • 4GB 1.62
  • 8GB 1.66
  • 16GB 1.73
Mathematica results are in points. Longer results (and bars) are better.

Mathematica was the only other test that saw a speed boost of greater than than 5 percent—but the overall increase on this test was only about 6 percent. After doubling the RAM from 4GB to 8GB, we saw a 2.5 percent increase in performance. After quadrupling it from 4GB to 16GB, we saw a 6 percent increase.

Elsewhere, not much changed

After running our Speedmark test suite with three different RAM configurations, we concluded that maxing out RAM won’t accelerate many computing pursuits. Of our 15 test results, 12 failed to show at least a 5 percent increase in speed when we upgraded our test systems from 4GB to 8GB or 16GB.

Below, we list the results for the 12 tests where our systems showed minor or no improvement after we added RAM. Some test results even seemed to get slightly worse after the RAM upgrades, although this effect is probably due to randomness.

iTunes
  • 4GB 101.33
  • 8GB 101.33
  • 16GB 105.33
HandBrake
  • 4GB 119.00
  • 8GB 117.67
  • 16GB 113.67
Results are in seconds. Shorter results and bars are better.Cinebench CPU
  • 4GB 80.00
  • 8GB 80.33
  • 16GB 80.00
Cinebench CPU test results are in seconds. Shorter results and bars are better.Cinebench OpenGL
  • 4GB 40.26
  • 8GB 40.23
  • 16GB 40.11
Cinebench OpenGL test results are in frames per second. Larger results/longer bars are better.Copy 6GB folder
  • 4GB 199.86
  • 8GB 201.76
  • 16GB 207.27
Zip 6GB folder
  • 4GB 337.36
  • 8GB 349.36
  • 16GB 316.14
Unzip 6GB folder
  • 4GB 226.82
  • 8GB 232.48
  • 16GB 234.20
Results are in seconds. Shorter results and bars are better.iPhoto import
  • 4GB 119.33
  • 8GB 113.33
  • 16GB 114.00
Aperture import
  • 4GB 89.00
  • 8GB 87.33
  • 16GB 91.00
Results are in seconds. Shorter results and bars are better.iMovie import
  • 4GB 76.26
  • 8GB 73.48
  • 16GB 73.98
iMovie export
  • 4GB 55.59
  • 8GB 54.27
  • 16GB 54.36
Results are in seconds. Shorter results and bars are better.Portal 2
  • 4GB 108.73
  • 8GB 109.17
  • 16GB 109.56
Portal 2 results are in frames per second. Larger results/longer bars are better.

What’s the ideal amount of RAM?

Most new Macs come with either 4GB or 8GB of RAM standard. That’s enough for most Macs destined for general use. In the real world, every Mac setup is different, so if you’re considering adding more RAM, be sure to keep track of your computer’s RAM usage during your normal workflow. If you tend to leave apps open instead of closing them, or if you keep several browser windows open with dozens of tabs in each, adding RAM will probably help your computer run more smoothly. If you use an app that handles large files, it helps to have a lot of RAM.

It’s not too hard to figure out the RAM sweet spot for your system and your workflow. If your Mac is running slowly, open Activity Monitor (Applications > Utilities > Activity Monitor) and check out the System Memory tab at the bottom of the window. If you’re low or completely out of Free or Inactive RAM and you’re not doing anything unusual (editing a humongous Photoshop file, for example), adding more RAM will probably speed up your performance.

Try not to get carried away, though, as adding fistfuls of RAM that your Mac will never or rarely use is throwing money away. Even if you can think of a few scenarios where you might use all of the RAM that your system can handle, consider how often they are likely to happen and whether buying RAM to handle them is worth your money. Take a bit of time to diagnose your system and get a rough idea of how much memory you’re using now; and think about what you plan to do in the future and how long it will be before you upgrade to a new Mac.

Editor's note: Updated 5/13/13 to include the non-Retina MacBook Pro in the list of Macs that have user-upgradeable RAM. Also added Tiger Direct and OWC to the list of online resources for buying RAM.

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