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Show Notes
Kapwing is an excellent Web-based video editing tool. Its useful new AI features make it easy to convert a long video â like a Zoom recording, an interview, or a presentationâ into short, shareable clips.
Watch the video above â or on YouTube â to see Kapwingâs co-founder and CEO show me how to do that. Read on for how and why to easily create video clips with Kapwingâs AI, and some limitations and alternatives.Â
Make social video clips with AI
The Kapwing feature I find most useful is Repurpose Studio. Video editing with Adobe Premiere or Final Cut Pro can be time consuming. If youâre creating short video clips for YouTube, Instagram, TikTok or LinkedIn, Kapwing and other new tools like Veed are easier and more efficient.
Video demo: Watch an excerpt from my interview with Kapwingâs CEO for her 1-minute overview of how to use AI to create social video clips from a long video.
How to create video clips with Kapwing
Step 1. Go to Kapwingâs Repurpose Studio. Itâs a simplified special section of Kapwingâs Web-based video editor. Upload a video recording, like a 20-minute presentation or a 60-minute Zoom recording.
Step 2. Wait a few minutes for processing. Kapwing uses AI to analyze the transcript for engaging material. It then suggests several clips, usually about a minute each. Preview the clips and pick one(s) you like.
Step 3. Pick your preferred aspect ratio (wide or tall) depending on whether youâre planning to publish clips on YouTube, Instagram, or TikTok. Optionally tweak the visual style of the captions.
Step 4. Export a clip you like, then upload it to a social platform like YouTube.
Step 5. Optional: Open Kapwingâs full video editor to make additional changes to a clip before exporting it. You can adjust a clipâs start or end point to alter its length. You can also trim the video by deleting words, sentences or even whole sections from the AI-generated transcript. Â
Step 6: Optional: Remove background noise. This step is crucial if you donât have a dedicated microphone or if youâre uploading a noisy Zoom or conference recording. Descript is best for noise removal (see my fuller take), but Kapwingâs audio cleanup is also good.
What to use Repurpose Studio for: Recordings people are unlikely to rewatch in full, like long panels or conference presentations. Clips can convey highlights efficiently. Normally, the editing would take hours. Now it can take minutes.
What not to use it for: This wonât work well for silent videos or music videos.
Caveats
* Kapwing doesnât yet upload directly to social or video platforms, so you have to export your video to your computer and then upload it to share.
* For pro video editing features like keyframes, which let you add an effect to a video frame by frame, Kapwing isnât as powerful as Final Cut Pro from Apple or Adobe Premiere.
* AI transcription isnât perfect. Youâll have to edit misunderstood words. In this postâs video, for example, âKapwingâ was transcribed occasionally as âKippingâ or âKapling.âÂ
* Kapwing doesnât yet generate video descriptions or chapter timecodes like Veed (see below), and it doesnât yet suggest or create thumbnails. Hopefully in the future.
Create a video in multiple languages
If youâve ever dreamed of being able to speak a new language, you might appreciate Kapwingâs AI dubbing. Record yourself in your native tongue. Then pick a language to dub yourself into.
Video excerpt: Kapwingâs CEO on how AI enables translating your voice
Kapwing lets you clone your own voice or use an AI-generated voice to narrate your video. The tech is from ElevenLabs, which has the leading voice AI models. You can then dub your video so it sounds like you (or an AI model) speaking any of 76 languages. You can also include translated captions.
More on dubbing: Kapwingâs overview page and 3-minute how-to video.
Caveats: Kapwingâs AI requires a paid subscription. It doesnât yet work for group conversations. The advanced video editing interface can be overwhelming for novices at first. Expect translation glitches, as with any AI translation tool.
Other AI features in Kapwing
You can use AI in Kapwing to generate a video script, turn a script into a video, generate a meme, create a slideshow, generate an image, or turn an article or document into a video like this one, which I created by pasting in the text of this post into Kapwingâs AI video generator.
Kapwing is free to test out to edit videos up to four minutes long, but theyâll have a watermark and be limited to 720p quality. And AI features are restricted, notably voice translation. It costs $192/year for full features, including AI capabilities. Educators and students can apply to use Kapwing for free.
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Alternatives: good AI-powered video editing tools
Veed is an excellent Web-based video editing tool with a simpler interface, similar pricing, and helpful AI features. It can auto-generate a YouTube video description and chapters. Iâm planning a future post about Veed.Â
Descript is a great tool for editing not just video, but also audio. AI features allow you to identify useful clips to share and remove background noise. Descriptâs filler word removal feature seems to work a bit better than that of Kapwing.Â
Hypernatural is a brand new useful AI-powered editing tool specifically for generating short video clips from audio or Zoom meetings. It uses AI to generate images suited to your audio, yielding short shareable video clips like this.Â
Captions is an AI video editing tool thatâs excellent for automated, cool-looking captions. You can also use it to translate videos of up to 5 minutes in your own dubbed voice. Iâve tried the iPhone, Web and Mac apps â Android is coming soon. Read more about the app: đ
I used Captionsâ Mac app to clone my voice and translate my 90-second video about AI for educators. See how it turned out: versions in Englishđșđž; Italian đźđč; JapaneseđŻđ”; Germanđ©đȘ; and Hindiđźđł. What do you think?
Lipdub is a related free app from Captions.ai. Record short clips in one language and translate them into another. This 30-second demo video shows someone using Lipdubâs AI to simulate speaking a dozen languages.Â
Whatâs your take on AI for video editing? Leave a comment đ
Update: Last week I wrote about one of my favorite survey tools, Tally.
Hereâs a quick summary of some of my initial takeaways from your responses to my survey asking for feedback on Wonder Tools:
* A majority of readers who responded were in favor of me including more videos and, where relevant, including step-by-step guidance on tools.
* There was also support for curated items, and for inviting occasional guest writers. If youâre interested in writing a guest post, reply to this post.
* You had a great range of topic suggestions. Iâll draw on your ideas this year, noting your interest in AI and productivity tools.
* I appreciate your input! Itâs helpful as I plan for the year ahead.
The feedback survey remains open so please still share your feedback! Thanks!
p.s. Do you have your own project? This is the final week for applications to the 100-day online CUNY course I lead. Watch our open house video or visit the program page and apply.
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