Ed Marrs
July 3rd, 2005, 04:29 PM
Are there any plugins that might be available from Adobe or others to edit 1920 x 1080p video in Premier Pro?
That is, in addition to Prospect HD; unless there’s a Prospect HD viewer only (not licensed to convert anything into the Prospect HD format), then perhaps a Thomson/Grass Valley Spirit 2K/4K DataCine film scanner to Prospect HD format conversion could first be done at some service provider in Southern California, if such exists; since I only need to do some restoration work on 1 or 2 fairly short 16/35mm films, sometime in the next year. Otherwise what formats in addition to CineForm HD (CFHD) may be available as an intermediate to retain 1920 x 1080p data or perhaps allow for PPro editing directly? I will normally be editing HDV in Aspect HD on a notebook that I’m now considering. Alternatively if the 1080p codecs aren’t available would it be better to wait a year or so for PPro 2.0 to provide for further HD options and various conversion programs to get written?
The notebook could be a 3.4GHz Pentium 4 (HP zd8000, with 2MB L2 cache, 800 MHz front-side bus with 2GB DDR2 533MHz SDRAM and a 5400 RPM drive, with a 1680 x 1050 display for $2482 from costco.com; using a LaCie 1 terabyte Firewire-800, 7200 RPM external drive, transferring 55MB/s sustained, costco $850+PCMCIA card) if it’s all sufficient to edit 720p; and occasionally a couple of streams of 1920 x 1080p in Premier Pro with After Effects? Significantly without dropping any frames in the edited result; however I wouldn't particularly care if it skipped over frames that I might just see during editing occasionally. Since I’m fairly mobile, a desktop processor would be a real problem. Finally if any basic HD formatting or general compressor/decompressor information is described anywhere else a simple reference would suffice; however I haven’t been able to find it so far.
http://www.shopping.hp.com/webapp/shopping/computer_series.do?series_name=zd8000_series&catLevel=2&category=notebooks/hp_pavilion&storeName=computer_store
(Boxx and 1 Beyond laptops seem that they could work well, but may be a bit high end for something changing so rapidly; in fact their basic configurations are not significantly different from the HP zd8000 mentioned. Although Dell’s Inspiron XPS has a 1920 x 1200 display, however they switched from a 3.4GHz Pentium 4 to an M series at 2.1Ghz which looks like a problem; and their claim that the 2MB cache overcomes this is probably false since various Pentium 4s as HP’s are using the same size cache; so I’ll sacrifice HD screen resolution for processor speed.)
That is, in addition to Prospect HD; unless there’s a Prospect HD viewer only (not licensed to convert anything into the Prospect HD format), then perhaps a Thomson/Grass Valley Spirit 2K/4K DataCine film scanner to Prospect HD format conversion could first be done at some service provider in Southern California, if such exists; since I only need to do some restoration work on 1 or 2 fairly short 16/35mm films, sometime in the next year. Otherwise what formats in addition to CineForm HD (CFHD) may be available as an intermediate to retain 1920 x 1080p data or perhaps allow for PPro editing directly? I will normally be editing HDV in Aspect HD on a notebook that I’m now considering. Alternatively if the 1080p codecs aren’t available would it be better to wait a year or so for PPro 2.0 to provide for further HD options and various conversion programs to get written?
The notebook could be a 3.4GHz Pentium 4 (HP zd8000, with 2MB L2 cache, 800 MHz front-side bus with 2GB DDR2 533MHz SDRAM and a 5400 RPM drive, with a 1680 x 1050 display for $2482 from costco.com; using a LaCie 1 terabyte Firewire-800, 7200 RPM external drive, transferring 55MB/s sustained, costco $850+PCMCIA card) if it’s all sufficient to edit 720p; and occasionally a couple of streams of 1920 x 1080p in Premier Pro with After Effects? Significantly without dropping any frames in the edited result; however I wouldn't particularly care if it skipped over frames that I might just see during editing occasionally. Since I’m fairly mobile, a desktop processor would be a real problem. Finally if any basic HD formatting or general compressor/decompressor information is described anywhere else a simple reference would suffice; however I haven’t been able to find it so far.
http://www.shopping.hp.com/webapp/shopping/computer_series.do?series_name=zd8000_series&catLevel=2&category=notebooks/hp_pavilion&storeName=computer_store
(Boxx and 1 Beyond laptops seem that they could work well, but may be a bit high end for something changing so rapidly; in fact their basic configurations are not significantly different from the HP zd8000 mentioned. Although Dell’s Inspiron XPS has a 1920 x 1200 display, however they switched from a 3.4GHz Pentium 4 to an M series at 2.1Ghz which looks like a problem; and their claim that the 2MB cache overcomes this is probably false since various Pentium 4s as HP’s are using the same size cache; so I’ll sacrifice HD screen resolution for processor speed.)