
- MOVIES APPS FOR ANDROID 2016 MOVIE
- MOVIES APPS FOR ANDROID 2016 UPDATE
- MOVIES APPS FOR ANDROID 2016 PRO
- MOVIES APPS FOR ANDROID 2016 FREE
Splash is one of the first apps that helps you shoot 360-degree video to be watched on them, as well as shared with friends who can watch them without a headset. Virtual reality headsets, from Oculus Rift to Google Cardboard, are growing in popularity. Perfect for everyone from beginners to videography pros, it has bags of features – slo-mo, time-lapse, all manner of aspect-ratio options and even a vertical-orientation mode.
MOVIES APPS FOR ANDROID 2016 PRO
Wherever you’re planning to edit your footage, FiLMiC Pro is one of the best apps to shoot it. Kids will get the hang of shooting quickly, and have lots of fun. This app from Mattel is for Minecraft-mad children who want to make stop-motion movies with their favourite characters, from pigs to creepers, which are sold separately.
MOVIES APPS FOR ANDROID 2016 MOVIE
Minecraft Stop-Motion Movie Creator (Android/iOS)

It’s easy for whipping up quick films with your footage, but its more powerful features are worth tinkering with for even better results. PowerDirector Mobile (Android)Īndroid users looking for a direct equivalent to Apple’s iMovie should check out this. Filming your child playing with a giant, menacing mech-robot was never so easy. FxGuru: Movie FX Director (Android/iOS)įrom werewolves and zombies to earthquakes and meteor strikes, FxGuru is a fun app for adding Hollywood-style special effects to your own clips. Today’s updates show the company is continuing to press its advantage.Watch this FxGuru: Movie Fx Director preview.
MOVIES APPS FOR ANDROID 2016 FREE
As a complete free storage and sharing solution, though, Google Photos still has a big lead. The fact that Facebook does has given its own photo-sharing app, Moments, a running start as it builds a similar product. Sharing tools are important to Google Photos given its biggest drawback - it doesn’t know who your friends and family are. You can also share with contacts who aren’t among the 200 million people who use Google Photos each month - they receive a link to the web album, sent via SMS or email. When they open it they’ll find everything you’ve sent them, and from there they can add the photos to their own libraries or leave a comment. Once you share with your friends, they receive a notification from Google Photos. Tap it and your contacts will appear above the traditional share sheet, and any contacts who have Google Photos installed will appear with an app icon next to their face. If your friends and family have Google Photos installed, you can share your photos and videos with them directly using the app’s share sheet.
MOVIES APPS FOR ANDROID 2016 UPDATE
The addition of concept movies is part of a broader update to Google Photos that also includes in-app sharing for Android and iOS devices.

All the things that people do, we can make special movies around them." "Christmas, Halloween, Thanksgiving, Little League highlights, dance recitals. "You can imagine where this goes," Novikoff said. The idea, he said, was "let’s leverage this to make movies that are emotionally powerful - that make your really smile, or even make you cry and reminisce and show your family."

Tim Novikoff, who joined Google last year when it acquired his video-editing company, Fly Labs, said the feature takes advantage of Google’s advancements in deep learning and computer vision. "Let's make movies that are emotionally powerful" Each movie runs from 20 seconds to about 2 minutes depending on how many photos Google uses. Soon there will be a third concept, "Special Day," that turns recent uploads from weddings, birthday parties, and other celebrations into movies. On Thursday the company is following up with "Summer of Smiles," which finds your happiest photos from the summer that ends this week and stitches them into a montage. The feature is aimed at parents, but doting aunts, uncles, and friends may see one of the movies pop up in their Photos feed as well. The company says it will pick only your best photos, which means that photos of kids who are blinking or out of focus won’t be included.

If you have hundreds of photos and videos of children in Google Photos, the company will begin organizing them into movies. The first concept movie is called "They Grow Up So Fast," and it’s just what you’d think. Today the company is introducing taking another step in that direction with themed "concept movies": videos generated algorithmically based on their content. Come home from a trip and within a day or so Google will have stitched your photos and video clips into a mini-movie complete with jaunty music and transitions. Since the day it launched, one of Google Photos’ more compelling features has been its automatically generated montage videos.
