![]() Last night I tried to do speed ramping in Premiere by copying and pasting work I've already done to a new clip (Something I've done many times in the past). (marketing that it's stable when it completely isn't.) Whoever is in charge of the Premiere team needs to be swapped out with someone who can manage all of this better, as the existing situation is just straight up deceptive. The top feature of this release is 'stability' LOL Where are the updates to address the issues paying customers are having? How are weekly updates not being rolled out for the people that rely on your software to pay their bills? Adobe is worth over 200 BILLION dollars. ![]() It's been two months of v24 and it's still at 24.0 with so many people complaining about bugs. ![]() Drives are NAS SSD's, optimize at 10GB ethernetĪdobe sells this software for features films, but it can't handle this YET.Īre any updates coming in? We can't finish our documentary that way.Media Cache on seprate drive from Project Files.(2) Monitors + Reference one (but even disabling the i/o interface doesn't help).4TB of 4k footage imported approx, with other footages (Mainly C70/R5C files and Gopros, drones dji, sony alpha's etc.).for 30 minutes, then it started to keep on laggin and stuttering. And for problematic stuff, there's always the opportunity for a Swift migration, which takes time.We started edting a documentary on Premiere PRO 2024, on a clean install, with tons of footage (MXF Files / ProRes 422), on a MAC M2 Ultra Studio (128 gb) and the playback just doesn't work AT ALL.Īfter being on a phone with a tech guy from Adobe and after sharing access to my comp, the only solution was to disable INPUT AUDIO (microphone), and reset media caches & preferences. While I wouldn't expect 30 year old code to still be lurking in there, I'm sure there is lots of older Objective-C code that will need to be examined. Which means that it's one of those apps that has survived the transition from 68K -> PowerPC and PowerPC -> Intel before now. ![]() Premiere Pro dates back nearly 20 years having launched in 2003 and its predecessor Adobe Premiere was released 30 years ago. You might have missed it - your post is dated April 5th. It's been too long for a change and Apple's entry level M1 shows what a quantum leap ASi already makes. Can't wait to see benchmarks, including Premiere, blow away Intel-based Macs. One of these rumors will actually come true. Isn't Apple having another announcement any time? Like in late March. It might take that long for plug-in vendors to complete the transition but if they were programming for macOS the correct way, the transition shouldn't be that bad. Personally, I don't think you'll have to wait 18-24 months for Apple to release these Macs but you might have to wait for Adobe to complete their transition from their antique code base. Not an Adobe user (anymore) but it does show how much influence Apple has on the market by forcing Adobe to hurry up and get their code ready for when the iMac and Mac Pro are released with Apple's M-series SoCs. Fingers crossed we are not losing chunks of functionality in the process/transition. Do not see abandoning Intel-based machines for production work anytime in the next 12-18 months, but 18-24 months should look fairly promising as additional AS machines are released. This is good news for macOS moving forward, even if it's going to take awhile to transition there.
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