Perrone Ford
January 20th, 2009, 04:58 PM
I wanted to refute something I said on these forums some time ago, and it's a pleasant thing so hopefully this helps others.
In my work, I have occasion to trade files back and forth with Mac users. In the past this has been a royal pain. Having to work in QT Lossless, or PNG, or other such format. Recently, I moved to using the Avid DNxHD codec, and that's terrific for new work where the Mac user knows he or she will be working with a PC user and needs a suitable format to trade back and forth with.
Recently, Apple enabled ProRes playback in Quicktime. I had previously thought (and said) that this was playback only, and was not helpful for editing. However, after a user here on DVi helped me with some testing, I can confirm that I was able to open and edit both a ProRes 422 and a ProRes HQ file. So it seems that if the PC user installs the latest Quicktime, or installs codec support for ProRes, they can indeed open and edit Mac ProRes encoded files.
I cannot verify this for anything but Sony Vegas 8.0c and 8.1. Hopefully others can try this with Premiere, Edius, Avid, and others. But at least its a real start in opening up high quality transfers between the two major platforms.
All I can say is, it's about friggin' time Apple!
Note, I still support DNxHD for projects that must go back and forth, since PC users still cannot encoded to ProRes. Which is a shame.
In my work, I have occasion to trade files back and forth with Mac users. In the past this has been a royal pain. Having to work in QT Lossless, or PNG, or other such format. Recently, I moved to using the Avid DNxHD codec, and that's terrific for new work where the Mac user knows he or she will be working with a PC user and needs a suitable format to trade back and forth with.
Recently, Apple enabled ProRes playback in Quicktime. I had previously thought (and said) that this was playback only, and was not helpful for editing. However, after a user here on DVi helped me with some testing, I can confirm that I was able to open and edit both a ProRes 422 and a ProRes HQ file. So it seems that if the PC user installs the latest Quicktime, or installs codec support for ProRes, they can indeed open and edit Mac ProRes encoded files.
I cannot verify this for anything but Sony Vegas 8.0c and 8.1. Hopefully others can try this with Premiere, Edius, Avid, and others. But at least its a real start in opening up high quality transfers between the two major platforms.
All I can say is, it's about friggin' time Apple!
Note, I still support DNxHD for projects that must go back and forth, since PC users still cannot encoded to ProRes. Which is a shame.