Elie,
The article that blasted Premiere and dual processors was featured in the June 2002 issue of Camcorder & Computer Video.
Author Jeff Zack built a dual processor AMD Athlon workstation only to discover that Premiere's so-called "dual processor support" was very disappointing.
I quote from his article:
"The first items that the timeline moved through were a title and the PiP effects that I had in the project."
"This went pretty fast, and I was encouraged."
"But, when the timeline moved to the video effects I had applied to the clips, it slowed down to a crawl."
"When I finished the project, it was obvious that there was very little gain - LESS THAN ONE MINUTE."
"The change was so insignificant that I was sure that there was something wrong with my setup."
"I checked the system, and the OS was seeing the second CPU just fine."
"Then, I checked Premiere with the same results."
"Now, a call to Adobe's PR folks was in order to find out what was going on."
"A callback from Adobe made it clear how limited the actual multi-processor support is in Premiere."
END QUOTE
This is why I think Ulead made a very good decision to vest development in SSE2 and 3DNow! aware code.
MediaStudio Pro - quite simply - is the fastest sub-$1,000 NLE on the market.
When I downloaded Vegas Video's trial, I was stunned by how S...L...O...W it was.
But dual processor results for Premiere are posted on this Web site and can be compared with results from MediaStudio Pro with just fast single processor configurations. It appears MediaStudio Pro is FASTER:
MediaStudio Pro 7.0 is going to be very, very cool.
Jerry Jones
The article that blasted Premiere and dual processors was featured in the June 2002 issue of Camcorder & Computer Video.
Author Jeff Zack built a dual processor AMD Athlon workstation only to discover that Premiere's so-called "dual processor support" was very disappointing.
I quote from his article:
"The first items that the timeline moved through were a title and the PiP effects that I had in the project."
"This went pretty fast, and I was encouraged."
"But, when the timeline moved to the video effects I had applied to the clips, it slowed down to a crawl."
"When I finished the project, it was obvious that there was very little gain - LESS THAN ONE MINUTE."
"The change was so insignificant that I was sure that there was something wrong with my setup."
"I checked the system, and the OS was seeing the second CPU just fine."
"Then, I checked Premiere with the same results."
"Now, a call to Adobe's PR folks was in order to find out what was going on."
"A callback from Adobe made it clear how limited the actual multi-processor support is in Premiere."
END QUOTE
This is why I think Ulead made a very good decision to vest development in SSE2 and 3DNow! aware code.
MediaStudio Pro - quite simply - is the fastest sub-$1,000 NLE on the market.
When I downloaded Vegas Video's trial, I was stunned by how S...L...O...W it was.
But dual processor results for Premiere are posted on this Web site and can be compared with results from MediaStudio Pro with just fast single processor configurations. It appears MediaStudio Pro is FASTER:
MediaStudio Pro 7.0 is going to be very, very cool.
Jerry Jones
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