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After Effect CS 6 on Imac?
Posted by Marc De coster on April 16, 2012 at 11:51 amHi guys,
I just saw the new features of AE CS6 and, lucky me, I was the ass sat on my chair so I didn’t fell down. We finally have 3D text, XML import and, last but not least, camera trackerBut … I bought an Imac last year and I wonder if the 3D raytracer from AE will be supported by my graphic card. Does anyone knows if it’ll work with the standard Imac card? And, if not, if I can change the graphic card on an Imac ???
Thanx
Marc
Todd Kopriva replied 14 years ago 5 Members · 9 Replies -
9 Replies
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Jeff Hinkle
April 16, 2012 at 4:42 pmThe graphics card on an iMac is part of the logic board and can’t be replaced. The only things you can upgrade on those babies is RAM and hard drive.
I haven’t been able to find the Adobe list of approved graphics card for 3D raytracing in AE6 yet (the link to that page on their site appears to be broken), but I’d think that on a machine less than a year old you should be okay. iMacs aren’t graphics powerhouses, but they usually get the job done.
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Marc De coster
April 17, 2012 at 7:33 amThanx for the answer. I cross my fingers (It’s a french expression, I don’t know if you use it in english. I means “I reaaaaally hope it’ll do it!”)
Let’s way and see thenMarc
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Jeff Hinkle
April 17, 2012 at 5:17 pmI’ll be crossing my fingers (we do that in English, too) for my iMac as well. Here’s hoping!
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Jon Bagge
April 17, 2012 at 7:23 pmI’m sure AE CS6 will work on an iMac, but I think accelerated GPU rendering for ray-tracing will require a NVIDIA card, and the iMac’s all use AMD.
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https://www.jonbagge.net
Jon Bagge – Editor – London, UK
Avid – FCP – After Effects -
Jon Bagge
April 18, 2012 at 11:39 pmIf your graphics card isn’t supported you can still render on the CPU. The more cores the better. It will just be much slower.
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https://www.jonbagge.net
Jon Bagge – Editor – London, UK
Avid – FCP – After Effects -
Todd Kopriva
April 21, 2012 at 5:23 amJon is correct.
The ray-traced 3D renderer can work on the CPU, but it’s very, very slow on the CPU. The GPU acceleration requires one of a specific set of cards, all of which are made by Nvidia. This is because we used the Nvidia OptiX library for the renderer.
I’ll post a list of supported cards soon on my blog, and of course there will be a list on the system requirements page when we release the software.
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Todd Kopriva, Adobe Systems Incorporated
product manager, professional video software
After Effects team blog
Premiere Pro team blog
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Cliff Elgin
May 8, 2012 at 9:52 pmOMG! I have a year old Imac, its taking minutes and minutes to render simple text.
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Todd Kopriva
May 9, 2012 at 12:59 am> OMG! I have a year old Imac, its taking minutes and minutes to render simple text.
Trying to use the ray-traced 3D renderer in Final Quality mode takes a very, very long time on the CPU. You really need to use one of the specified GPUs to make that work fast enough to be usable.
See the list of GPUs at the bottom of the system requirements page for what GPUs give this functionality:
https://www.adobe.com/products/aftereffects/tech-specs.htmlSee this video for details of the GPU features and how you can work in other draft modes without the GPU-accelerated ray-traced 3D renderer:
https://www.video2brain.com/en/lessons/system-requirements-for-gpu-acceleration-opengl-cuda———————————————————————————————————
Todd Kopriva, Adobe Systems Incorporated
product manager, professional video software
After Effects team blog
Premiere Pro team blog
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