Ed Marrs
July 28th, 2007, 01:36 PM
I use Windows 64 bit Vista on an HP dv9500 (2.2 GHz Core 2, 2GB memory, 800 MHz FSB, dual 7200RPM Drives, 1680x1050 display + NVIDIA 8600M GS) notebook and am interested in editing some 1920 * 1080p at 24 fps from scanned film, and later at 30 fps from a Sony HVR-V1U, in 1920 by 1080 progressive.
Adobe mentioned that their new Creative Suite 3 Master Collection which includes Premier Pro 3 uses only 32 bit processing, although with some additional downloading it could be made to run on 64 bit Vista, naturally doing only 32 bit computing. However they mentioned that Adobe’s software wouldn’t be converted to 64 bit processing until the Vista 64 bit operating systems became the Window’s standard, which was confirmed could be at least 2 or more years for Adobe to reprogram. (Which seems a little slow since Adobe is clearly not an underfunded company, paying executives $10 million per year for decades, we might expect that somebody could have noticed the transition coming several years ago and assigned one person to optimize the critical algorithms for 64 bit environments and onto something else.)
Alternatively, would Cineform’s latest Neo HD and codec which supports 1920 * 1080p and 10 bit color be able to take advantage of any 64 bit processing, or should I just give up on 64 bit processing altogether for at least 2 years? Perhaps more significantly would any actual 64 bit processing, even if just for the codec, improve the speed of Premier by more than 10%, or if all the algorithms were revised, by more than say 20%? Which may actually put the current reality on getting higher clock speeds and two cores which are standard on notebooks. CineForm.com mentions the Neo Player is free and plays all formats. Does this mean that if I have motion picture film scanned and converted to the CineForm HD format that I would use Neo Player in Premier for editing or viewing?
Thanks for any thoughts.
Adobe mentioned that their new Creative Suite 3 Master Collection which includes Premier Pro 3 uses only 32 bit processing, although with some additional downloading it could be made to run on 64 bit Vista, naturally doing only 32 bit computing. However they mentioned that Adobe’s software wouldn’t be converted to 64 bit processing until the Vista 64 bit operating systems became the Window’s standard, which was confirmed could be at least 2 or more years for Adobe to reprogram. (Which seems a little slow since Adobe is clearly not an underfunded company, paying executives $10 million per year for decades, we might expect that somebody could have noticed the transition coming several years ago and assigned one person to optimize the critical algorithms for 64 bit environments and onto something else.)
Alternatively, would Cineform’s latest Neo HD and codec which supports 1920 * 1080p and 10 bit color be able to take advantage of any 64 bit processing, or should I just give up on 64 bit processing altogether for at least 2 years? Perhaps more significantly would any actual 64 bit processing, even if just for the codec, improve the speed of Premier by more than 10%, or if all the algorithms were revised, by more than say 20%? Which may actually put the current reality on getting higher clock speeds and two cores which are standard on notebooks. CineForm.com mentions the Neo Player is free and plays all formats. Does this mean that if I have motion picture film scanned and converted to the CineForm HD format that I would use Neo Player in Premier for editing or viewing?
Thanks for any thoughts.