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18 features Adobe should borrow from Final Cut Pro 7
Kelly Grotte replied 12 years, 11 months ago 16 Members · 20 Replies
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Paddy Uglow
September 14, 2011 at 11:36 am#9 rising pitch on high-speed playback is the main thing that got me onto Premiere; when editing hour-long talks, it’s a great way to spot places where edits are needed. But yes, maybe time-stretch could be an option there. And it would be nice to control the percentage increase that the L/J keys do; I have to hold the mouse button to play at the speed I want.
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Jon Barrie
September 14, 2011 at 11:52 amYou can begin play at 1x with space or L key then hold down the shift key while tapping the L key to get increments of speed up. Hold the shift key and tap J to speed back the increments. I tend to tap it up in increments so I get it “chip munky” but it is crystal clear to hear all words and can easily make decisions way faster than realtime.
I believe its superior to FCPs options in this regard. But’s just me 🙂
– JB
Jon Barrie
Adobe Video Solutions Consultant ANZ
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Paddy Uglow
September 14, 2011 at 12:34 pmOooh YEESSS!!
I didn’t know about the shift-L combo!
I’ve been sitting there holding down the mouse button.
Next long talk I edit will be *much* easier.
Thanks
– Paddy -
Jon Barrie
September 14, 2011 at 12:48 pmNo worries mate. Here to help.
🙂 JB
Jon Barrie
Adobe Video Solutions Consultant ANZ
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Chase Smith
October 3, 2011 at 5:16 pmPaddy I have to agree with you, rising pitch and various other benefits of the playback on the Premiere Pro is a reason I like it over FCP.
This guy had the same views too, although he’s comparing it to FCP X – https://getcomparisons.com/final-cut-pro-x-vs-adobe-premiere-pro#review-4661
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James Huenergardt
October 28, 2011 at 3:53 pmIf Adobe is smart, they will bring in some FCP users and figure out what’s missing in Premiere Pro.
Adobe is in the ‘cat bird’ seat right now, and they can capitalize on this if they want to.
If they don’t, I will eventually be forced to spend extra $$ and move to Avid. I’d rather work in Adobe as I already use all the other Adobe tools every day.
I’ve posted feature requests based on what FCP can do and what PP can’t. Hopefully they are listening and will make the changes.
Having transition favorites is one of my requests. I don’t want to klutz with the mouse every time I need to bring in a 10 frame dissolve, etc.
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Aaron Rosapepe
August 13, 2012 at 12:32 amNew to Premiere from FCP myself. Has the option to choose a single attribute when performing ‘paste attributes’ been added in CS6 yet or still not there?
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Jon Chappell
August 13, 2012 at 1:07 amNope, still not there.
My software:
Pro Maintenance Tools – Tools to keep Final Cut Studio, Final Cut Pro X, Avid Media Composer and Adobe Premiere Pro running smoothly and fix problems when they arise
Pro Media Tools – Edit QuickTime chapters and metdata, detect gamma shifts, edit markers, watch renders and more
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Jon Barrie
August 13, 2012 at 3:16 amYou can select the effect or more than one holding the control/command key, copy, select the clips in timeline and paste.
Jon Barrie
Adobe Video Solutions Consultant ANZ
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Kelly Grotte
June 14, 2013 at 9:56 pmNo ripple dissolve and many of the transition effects standard in final cut pro 7 are not in premiere Pro.
Also, many of the plugins that you could purchase work in both softwares, however, there are extra steps in premiere pro vs. one click in final cut pro to do the same thing.
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