PluralEyes Connector for Premiere Pro CS6
You can download it here. For Both Mac and Windows.
Nice, can’t wait to try it out.
You can download it here. For Both Mac and Windows.
Nice, can’t wait to try it out.
I have posted the following to the Adobe Forums and hope to get a response soon:
I am trying to open my current Premiere Pro CS 5.5 project within Premiere Pro CS6, but am getting the following error message:
The preset used by one or more sequences requires third party components that could not be located.
This was a project that was imported from Final Cut Pro 7 originally, but the only 3rd party stuff used in it are Magic Bullet Suite plug ins and I have already installed them all.
I can’t even see if this project has CUDA acceleration anymore, as it is set to Custom Sequence and greyed out.
Any ideas what I can do?
The biggest here for me is selective past and remove attributes which I use all the time in FCP and it will be an adjustment for sure.
Still all livable changes, just have to get used to it.
Re: Vision Effects has released updates to all of it’s plug ins to support Adobe CS6 After Effects and Premiere Pro.
Personally I can’t live without Twixtor and ReelSmart Motion Blur, so these are welcome updates.
Little Frog in High Def has an article on getting output of an AJA to work with 23.976 footage playing out to 29.97. The disturbing part is that he doesn’t think that Black Magic has this option right now, so black magic won’t play out 24P footage to a monitor that only supports 29.97 like Final Cut Pro will do. I will keep on this and see if this is true. If so they really need to fix this and fast!
Todd Kopriva has an article on Premiere Pro using OpenCL on AMD Radeon HD 6750M and AMD Radeon HD 6770M graphics card with 1GB VRAM in MacBook Pro computers running Mac OSX v10.7 Awesome that they give some acceleration to non-CUDA macs since there are barely any available CUDA cards for Mac, and most Macs have AMD cards. Still they need further support in the future.
Still makes me thing that in the not too distant future a PC will be my main editing machine as it will have superior CUDA support.
Adobe blogs has a great little piece on how they continue to want feedback on Premiere Pro and will continue to update it, especially for Creative Cloud users (who are paying more anyway).
The great thing about Adobe is that they do talk to their users and do listen. Look how great Premiere Pro has gotten in such a short time, and it will only get better.
Sounds like the non-CUDA acceleration is pretty damn good, though as I have said I keep wishing for more NVIDIA on the mac, but it looks less and less likely to happen every day.