YouTube can now make your video much better with a stabilizer and 3D

YouTube can now make your video much better with a stabilizer and 3D YouTube has launched a new feature to its video editing tool to improve movements on the users’ footages. The video streaming site has announced an image stabilizer and a 3D tool this week. Earlier last year YouTube introduced its cloud-based video editor with basic feature aimed satisfy “majority of people’s video editing needs”. Now users have extended features with a stabilizer. You Tube writes in its blog post: “Ever shoot a shaky video that’s so jittery, it’s actually hard to watch? Professional cinematographers use stabilization equipment such as tripods or camera dollies to keep their shots smooth and steady. Our team mimicked these cinematographic principles by automatically determining the best camera path for you through a unified optimization technique. In plain English, you can smooth some of those unsteady videos with the click of a button. We also wanted you to be able to preview these results in real-time, before publishing the finished product to the Web. We can do this by harnessing the power of the cloud by splitting the computation required for stabilizing the video into chunks and distributed them across different servers. This allows us to use the power of many machines in parallel, computing and streaming the stabilized results quickly into the preview.” As for the 3D tool, YouTube’s official blog post stated: “If you’ve used a pair of cameras to capture stereographic video, but need the two streams to be synchronized and laid out in a way compatible with YouTube’s 3D feature, this new tool will do the work for you.”