Sunday, February 12, 2012

Adobe Premiere Pro review and import MOD to Adobe Premiere Pro

Adobe Premiere Pro is a timeline-based video editing software application. It is part of the Adobe Creative Suite, a suite of graphic design, video editing, and web development applications developed by Adobe Systems, though it can also be purchased separately. When purchased separately, it comes bundled with Adobe Media Encoder, Adobe Encore, and Adobe OnLocation.
Adobe's CS5 update of their software suite is in some ways a major one. With CS4 they brought a native 64-bit version of Photoshop, bringing with it the ability to address more than 2 gigabytes of RAM. They also added greater GPU acceleration to it, allowing Photoshop to scale and alter images in the UI on the graphics card, dependent largely on the amount of video memory available. This was all awesome for image editors, but as a video editor I found myself wondering where the 64-bit versions of Premiere and After Effects were. HD video was mainstream at this point and in the hands of consumers, and a high resolution still image is a drop in the bucket compared to how large video can get.
That's the major new feature of CS5: Adobe has gone fully 64-bit on the PC for this suite, bringing with it the ability to harness all of the memory available in modern machines along with enhanced threading for multi-core processors.
About Adobe Premiere Pro CS5:
PROS
64-bit platform
Expansive format support
Awesome color-key effects
CONS
Only minor upgrades over CS4
ATI Radeon graphics bug
Import video Format:
3GPP Movie (.3gp), Advanced Video Codec (.mts), AVCHD (.m2ts, .mts), DV stream (.dv), Flash Video (.flv, .f4v), Microsoft AVI (.avi), Microsoft NetShow (.asf), MPEG-1 (.mpg), MPEG-2 (.m2v, .mpg), MPEG-4 (.m4v), Panasonic P2 (.mxf), QuickTime Movie (.mov), Shockwave Flash object (.swf), Sony VDU File Format Importer (.dlx), Windows Media (.wma, .wmv), XDCam-EX movie (.mp4), XDCam-HD movie (.mxf)

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