It must have changed then, because it absolutely works now!
Cool! If it isn't completely seamless, though, then I don't know that it is any different than just using a view that shows them sequentially (and "Play All"). I suppose it
forces them to play sequentially even if you don't have a well-structured view.
1. Doesn't it take at least a minute or so to merge two (2) six (6) GB files?
2. Don't you have 3 files when you're done? The original 2 plus the newly merged one? So you need to delete the old files from the library and import the new one.
That's what I meant about time, effort, and intermediate files. A stack and a link takes something like 15 to 20 seconds and doesn't involve anything else.
Hah. I suppose it depends on your sense of scale. Doing the same thing "in the old days" (with other file types) usually involved re-encoding the output file and
hours of work. To me, a drag-drop, click "go", and wait 5 minutes (especially since you can batch them) is
very quick.
Also, you do have three files, but no intermediate files. Just the sources and the output file. An intermediate file (and codec) is a specific "thing" in video editing. Typical professional digital video editing involves three file types:
1. The source format: whatever native format the camera uses (these are optimized for different purposes, either record time, or quick writing speed).
2. The intermediate format: the format used for editing (this is now typically Apple ProRes in FCP, DNxHD on Avid, and I don't know what Premiere uses - these are typically optimized for performance and high-quality).
3. The delivery format: now it is typically H.264 in MP4 or on a BluRay. In the past it was often MPEG-2 for DVD and various older online streaming formats (and these are typically optimized for streaming performance and, unfortunately, encryption).
So, when you said it requires "intermediate files", to a video editor, that would mean it requires a
real intermediate editing format, like it would with a NLE application (in your example of merging two files, there would be at least four files, if not more, at the end).