We're introducing our most powerful search capability yet: the ability to search for topics and dialogue across multiple sequences at once using our new Discuss tool.
This release also adds floating license support for teams that need flexibility in how licenses are shared. Plus, we've refined the editing experience with improved source timecode handling, better error messages, and performance optimizations throughout.
Whether you're managing footage across multiple projects or fine-tuning your existing workflow, this update gives you more control and fewer surprises.
The new Discuss tool lets you search for topics, dialogue, or visual content across multiple sequences, and creates a bin of subclips from the results.
Instead of hunting through individual sequences one by one, you can now ask Quickture to find every mention of a topic, person, or phrase across your entire project and get back a curated collection of clips ready to use.
Perfect for:
Finding all instances of a subject across multiple interviews
Pulling together B-roll or archival material from different sequences
Building assemblies from multi-camera or multi-sequence shoots
Research and story development across large projects
Quickture now supports floating licenses, making it easier for teams to share access across workstations without being locked to a single machine.
This is especially useful for facilities with shared edit bays or teams that work across multiple systems. Licenses can now be checked out when you need them and released when you're done, giving your team the flexibility to use Quickture where and when it's needed most.
We've tightened up how Quickture handles source timecode in a variety of edge cases:
Fixed handling of sequences with identical source and sequence timecodes — Quickture now correctly optimizes these cases without breaking timecode display
Improved zero point and source TC start handling — especially for sequences imported from Premiere via AAF
Fixed null source timecode issues in Premiere mode — no more broken timecode displays in the visual transcript
These fixes make source timecode toggling more reliable across different workflows and NLE configurations.
When something goes wrong loading a transcript, Quickture now gives you clear, actionable feedback instead of generic error states. You'll know what happened and what to do next — no guessing required.
Quickture now supports Canadian French and Hebrew, expanding our growing list of supported languages for transcription and editing.
Fixed Premiere sequence filtering — the sequence navbar now correctly filters out non-Quickture'd sequences in Premiere, so you only see what matters
Increased control surface editing delay to 150ms — improves stability when making rapid edits in Premiere Pro
Fixed video analysis multisequence response — sequence names are now correctly included when finding clips across multiple sequences
Improved metrics collection — migrated Dramatiq metrics to DogStatsD and implemented dual-write for better observability
Security update — bumped Rust time crate to patch RUSTSEC-2026-0009