If you're a stills photographer wanting to document your way of working and the environment you find yourself in using your iPhone, Rush can be useful. Other than that, the interface seems to be moving in the right direction. You have the option to sync via Dropbox or Google Drive, which seems to work much faster. It's super slow and the mobile app shows it has synced when it hasn't, so an indicator showing progress will be a great update I am sure they're working on. I think the syncing with Creative Cloud is an issue. I can't tell you what the differences in frame rates were, but it doesn't look as though it was a problem. It was possible to get the shots off the GoPro directly onto the phone and import it into Rush. We used my iPhone X, the Moment Wide Angle lens, and adapter and the GoPro Hero 7 Black for some hyper-lapses, and had a good time shooting. Adding text, music, and using color profiles to give your video that professional feel is all done on the iPhone and it makes it a pleasure to use. The touch interface on the mobile app is quite intuitive and cutting and moving shots around is easy to do. If you subscribe to the Creative Cloud, you'll get the mobile and desktop app included, and what Adobe tried to achieve here, is the ability to sync what is shot and edited on mobile with the desktop app, and if need be, to export to Premiere Pro for final edits. You can download the mobile app for iOS, and early in 2019, the Android version will be released.
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