What Macxvideo AI does on Mac
Macxvideo AI is a macOS video suite from Digiarty (MacXDVD) that combines AI enhancement for video, images, and audio with conversion, compression, screen recording, and basic editing in one app.
The product targets creators who want upscaling, denoising, and format conversion without juggling several tools. Three AI modules cover typical workflows: Video AI for super-resolution, frame interpolation, stabilization, and blur removal; Image AI for face restoration and resolution boosts; Audio AI for background noise suppression on voice tracks. Beyond AI, the app handles bulk transcoding across hundreds of formats, lossy and lossless compression, URL-based downloads from many sites, and a built-in editor for trim, crop, subtitles, and watermarks.
Typical Mac workflow
Import clips from iPhone, GoPro, DJI, or digitized DVDs, then route them through Video AI to upscale 720p or 1080p toward 4K, or through the converter to HEVC, AV1, or ProRes for Apple devices. GPU acceleration via Metal is central to the vendor’s pitch: AI and transcode jobs run on the GPU to keep CPU load low during batch work. Screen recording supports up to 4K at 60 fps with optional webcam overlay for tutorials. When footage is ready, compression presets can shrink file size before upload or archive.
Version 3.15.0
Build 3.15.0 shipped June 8, 2026. Official release notes add a Keep Original Colors toggle to AI Super Resolution in the Video AI module, which aims to preserve source color after upscaling instead of shifting hue or saturation. The same update fixes a bug where the YouTube Analysis Engine could not update. Digiarty labels it a major update, though the public changelog lists only these two user-facing changes.
Licensing and requirements
Macxvideo AI requires macOS 10.15 or later according to vendor documentation. It is sold directly from Digiarty with annual and lifetime license options; lifetime plans include future version upgrades per the vendor FAQ. AI upscaling and 4K/8K transcoding benefit from Apple silicon or a Mac with strong GPU resources; heavy jobs may run slowly on older Intel hardware.






