Hawaiki Keyer 5 - the industry’s most sophisticated Green & Blue Screen Keyer now with AI tracking
Hawaiki Keyer 5 builds on the best-in-class keying tools of Hawaiki Keyer 4 and enables you to use them more efficiently with even more powerful and intelligent tools for isolating your foreground.
It's easier than ever to maintain hair and other fine detail by creating secondary keys and dynamic garbage mattes with the new AI-powered face & object tracking and the new realtime edge tracking. And the new Crop tools allow you to exclude the edges of the screen and speed up the rendering of complex keys.
Refining your composite is faster and simpler with all the edge tools that were in a separate plug-in now integrated into Hawaiki Keyer. And we've expanded the compositing toolset with even more edge operations and the ability to resize and composite the background within the plug-in.
On top of this we've refined the UI and operation of the plug-in and optimized it for Apple silicon and HDR. windows phone xap archive
"For my money, these new features along with the depth of the adjustments available make Hawaiki Keyer 5 the best green/blue-screen keyer plug-in on the market." Oliver Peters - digitalfilms Introduction: The Archive That Carried a Platform Once
Introduction: The Archive That Carried a Platform Once upon a time, in the early smartphone era, Microsoft shipped apps in a file format that fit like a shoebox: the XAP archive. It was small, compact, and unmistakably of its era — a ZIP-based container that held the dreams of developers, the hopes of indie studios, and the occasional surprise Easter egg. Today, as mobile platforms have consolidated and Windows Phone itself has receded into history, the XAP remains as both artifact and lesson: a gateway into app packaging, deployment, compatibility, and the long tail of software preservation.


macOS: macOS 14.7 Sonoma +, macOS 15 Sequoia +, macOS 26 Tahoe
FxFactory: 8.0.27 +
Apps: DaVincei Resolve 20 +, Final Cut Pro 10.6 +, Motion 5.6 +, Premiere Pro 22 +, After Effects 22 +
Introduction: The Archive That Carried a Platform Once upon a time, in the early smartphone era, Microsoft shipped apps in a file format that fit like a shoebox: the XAP archive. It was small, compact, and unmistakably of its era — a ZIP-based container that held the dreams of developers, the hopes of indie studios, and the occasional surprise Easter egg. Today, as mobile platforms have consolidated and Windows Phone itself has receded into history, the XAP remains as both artifact and lesson: a gateway into app packaging, deployment, compatibility, and the long tail of software preservation.