David Baud
Forum Replies Created
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I am not in front of Premiere right now, but I believe there is a checkbox in the Preference menu that let you turn that option off.
David Baud
Editor & VFX
KOSMOS PRODUCTIONS
Denver – Paris
http://www.kosmos-productions.com -
Hello Pedro,
My MacPro 4,1 system setup is different than yours: I use an ATI Radeon HD 5770 in slot-1 and the nVIDIA GTX 570 in slot-2. In order to install the driver for the nVIDIA card I followed the instruction there:
https://www.nvidia.com/object/macosx-270.00.00f06-driver.html
For the record I did not flash my EVGA GTX 570 card since I am using it headless (just for GPU).
It says you need to have Lion installed (OS 10.7.4), but I don’t know if you can still make it work with Snow Leopard.Yes I believe if your system does not recognize your graphics card in slot-1, it could crash when trying to boot…
I hope this help,
David Baud
Editor & VFX
KOSMOS PRODUCTIONS
Denver – Paris
http://www.kosmos-productions.com -
I believe you need to have the CUDA driver version 5.0.17 installed for the nVIDIA GTX 570 card. I am guessing that the Quadro 4000 will be just fine with the same driver.
David Baud
Editor & VFX
KOSMOS PRODUCTIONS
Denver – Paris
http://www.kosmos-productions.com -
David Baud
August 24, 2012 at 10:54 pm in reply to: CS6 Premiere Decklink Studio Stutter, video stops, audio continues.?I just wanted to add my experience on this thread.
I had exactly the same symptom with my system running CS6 Premiere Pro and monitoring video via my Decklink Studio, using Blackmagic Desktop Video driver version 9.6. As soon as I monitor my video bypassing the Decklink, on my desktop computer monitor, then I did not have any drop frames.
I proceeded to install the Blackmagic Desktop Video driver version 9.6.2 and the problem seems to have vanished!
My system:
MacPro 4,1
24 GB RAM
ATI HD5770 card
NVidia GTX 570
Decklink Studio 2David Baud
Post & VFX
KOSMOS PRODUCTIONS
Denver – Paris
https://www.kosmos-productions.com -
Unfortunately color accuracy can be tricky because they are so many areas where things can go wrong.
First in AE, you need to tell what is the color space of your footage (video, still, graphics…): this is done in via the Interpret footage dialog box.
Then, as you already know, you need to specify the color space of your choice for your work in your composition in the Project Settings dialog box. This is where it is important to match the color space of your monitor, if you want to be accurate in your color choices and adjustment. I agree with Walter that you need to calibrate your monitor before you can make any accurate judgement.
If you work with video, ideally you want to be able to send your signal to a calibrated broadcast monitor using a third party video card.
Finally when you are ready to render, you need to make sure to specify the color space intended for your finished movie to be display on, assuming your AE render is your final step. The choice of wrapper and codec is important : you need to know how they handled color space internally. I do my work mostly with Quicktime and ProRes, so I am not sure about AVI and Uncompressed. You may want to try to render out to a different format and see what you get, like PNG.
As Walter mentioned, your also need to know how your player behave with your movie color space : some of them might completely ignore any kind of color space flag part of your movie file, some other might just assume everything feed to them is sRGB.
I hope this help,
David Baud
Editor & VFX
KOSMOS PRODUCTIONS
Denver – Paris
http://www.kosmos-productions.com -
If you mouse double-click on the keyframe that you want to modify (even if your CTI is not located on top of it), a window will pop up and let you input your new parameters.
David Baud
Editor & VFX
KOSMOS PRODUCTIONS
Denver – Paris
http://www.kosmos-productions.com -
What kind of hard drive are you playing your media from?
have you moved from CS5 to CS6 recently? did you have any trouble before?David Baud
Editor & VFX
KOSMOS PRODUCTIONS
Denver – Paris
http://www.kosmos-productions.com -
Thanks Sascha for your reply.
So I guess the GTX-570 will work as well (two 6-pin power connectors).
In my case I don’t think the GT-120 will work: I need to feed two monitors with DVI or display ports at a minimum of 1920×1200 resolutions. The GT-120 seems to have one VGA and one DVI ports only.Unfortunately the Quadro 4000 is out of my budget.
How about the idea to run Resolve (GPU and GUI) from the same card, a GTX-470 or GTX-570? what are the pros and cons?
I am also using the same system to run FCP, FCP-X and Adobe Suite: any other issues I should be aware of?
Finally why do you say to stay away from ATI cards? Resolve documentation has listed the ATI 5770 as one of the recommended graphics cards? what is your experience?
Thanks,
David Baud
Editor & VFX
KOSMOS PRODUCTIONS
Denver – Paris
http://www.kosmos-productions.com -
Yes it does.
Thank you
David
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Thanks for your reply!
I guess what I don’t understand is how do you connect a Multibridge to the DL HD Pro PCI-X card?
Thanks,