View Full Version : Premiere Pro CS5 64 Bit Official


Todd Clark
October 20th, 2009, 11:18 AM
The Future is 64bit (UK Creative Thoughts) (http://blogs.adobe.com/marcus/2009/10/the_future_is_64bit.html)

Brett Griffin
October 21st, 2009, 03:34 AM
Fantastic news. Now my I7 with 12gb DDR3 ram can fully be put to use. Finally.

John Hewat
October 25th, 2009, 05:25 PM
It is good news. But it just makes me frustrated that I am constantly playing catch-up.

I am still in the process of trying to get Neo HD talking to CS4 on my Vista PC.

By the time it works, I'll be ready for CS5 on Win7.

O well. At least the changes are for the better.

Randy Sanchez
October 28th, 2009, 01:48 AM
In some ways i feel like ive been playing catch up since 1998.. But more with getting my system speed up to being able to run software i want.. Then once it handles the things i currently want to run, something new has come along and im back to trying to get a system up to run the newer software id like without it crawling at snails pace. its a never ending cycle..

Brett Griffin
October 29th, 2009, 04:55 AM
It all falls back to the joy of owning a computer. Faster, newer things popup day after day.

Ray Bell
October 29th, 2009, 09:56 PM
Well I guess it had to happen sooner or later... Adobe is saying that the next platform
of AE and Premier Pro ( version 5) will only be released on 64 bit platform...

Thats a pretty big gamble on their part, I know I don't have any op system to run it and
I'm not sure I want to build a computer just to run Adobe stuff....

here's the blurb on the subject...

The future of After Effects is 64-bit native - Keyframes (http://blogs.adobe.com/keyframes/2009/10/our_next_release_64-bit_native.html)

Todd Clark
October 30th, 2009, 07:42 AM
How is this a big gamble??

These are Pro aps and there is no pro that wants to stay 32 bit!

David Dwyer
October 30th, 2009, 07:53 AM
What dates are we looking at for this product?

Marty Baggen
October 30th, 2009, 09:02 AM
Hopefully 64-bit Premiere will offer a faster restart after crash.

Todd Clark
October 30th, 2009, 09:28 AM
Thats funny.

Andrew Smith
October 30th, 2009, 09:41 AM
The crashes themselves should also increase in speed.

Andrew

David Dwyer
October 30th, 2009, 10:34 AM
Will CS5 include Elemental Accelerator or something like it for GPU encoding?

Stephen Armour
October 30th, 2009, 10:44 AM
The crashes themselves should also increase in speed.

Andrew

Wow! Now we can crash and be back up (maybe) in 5 min (maybe)!

...if the disk doesn't get corrupted....if the file actually was saved by PP....if our RAID doesn't try to check itself for errors after the crash...if we can even remember what we were doing before the crash....

sigh

Marty Baggen
October 30th, 2009, 11:18 AM
Stephen,

Your 5 minute would be nice, but I think you would find that most masochistic editors would be very pleased with anything less than 8.

I have heard that CS5 will offer color correction for the BSOD.

Exciting times!

Stephen Armour
October 30th, 2009, 11:33 AM
...I have heard that CS5 will offer color correction for the BSOD...!

yeah.....blood red...for "Blood Sucking Over Dose"

Ken Hodson
October 30th, 2009, 09:49 PM
Fantastic news. Now my I7 with 12gb DDR3 ram can fully be put to use. Finally.

The current version recommends 16GB ram for optimum performance now. Problem is memory makers continue to shy away from 4GB sticks, with no change in sight. DDR3 4GB is absolutely ridiculous. It costs far more then what DDR2 4GB sticks were. Where is the advancement?