Forum Replies Created

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  • Josh Weiss

    February 10, 2006 at 8:21 pm in reply to: Microsoft DV compression in a Premiere Pro timeline

    My real question is what codec can I render out of AE that will not need to be rendered in a premiere timeline. I know Microsft DV is one of these, but as I said am unhappy with premiere handles those and the ultimate quality. Will buying the Main concept codec and rendering out of AE with this codec be the best solution? Any other options?

  • Josh Weiss

    February 10, 2006 at 8:16 pm in reply to: Understanding Dynamic Link

    Well you were able to bring a premiere project into after effects with AE 6.5 and Premiere pro 1.5, so that is nothing new. From what I understand, the new thing is that you can now bring in an AE comp into a premiere timeline without having to render out to file. What this means is that if you have an edit based on AE projects, you can assemble them in premiere, then make your changes in AE and it will automatically update. No wasting HD space on more renders or having to wait for the renders from AE each time.

  • Josh Weiss

    February 8, 2006 at 7:43 pm in reply to: Microsoft DV compression in a Premiere Pro timeline

    I went to After Effects to export a clip with the Main Concept setting as specified earlier, and that doesn’t appear on my list of Avi codecs, however it does appear in an Mpeg. Is there something that I’m missing?

  • Josh Weiss

    February 8, 2006 at 7:17 pm in reply to: X-Serve, FCP 6, FC Extreme Rumors?

    To clarify, I meant to say the X-serve RAID.

  • Josh Weiss

    February 8, 2006 at 2:08 am in reply to: Marking a Clip in Premiere

    The / key will mark a clip that is already in your timeline if you click on it. The reason I was asking for this shortcut key is for the purpose of replacing an old clip with a new one from your source window. To insert a whole clip from your source window to your timeline, you can just hit the , for in insert edit or . for an overwrite edit.

  • Josh Weiss

    February 5, 2006 at 10:01 pm in reply to: Marking a Clip in Premiere

    In Final cut there are selections for which video track is active. So if for instance you want to do an insert edit on an audio track that thinks it should go on 1 and 2 you can move these markers to 3 and 4 and the clip will insert to that track. So when you mark a clip without the mouse, it will mark video one as the default track first if it is active, if you make in not active it will go to video 2 and so on. You can make only one track active so you don’t have to fumble around with it too much. Its a nice system.

  • Josh Weiss

    February 4, 2006 at 11:27 pm in reply to: Marking a Clip in Premiere

    Yeah, that did it. The hardest part was finding that in the menus. There’s no way to search, so at least knowing the / shortcut I could then find it and change it to X as in final cut. Thanks a lot guys.

  • Has automatic Duck ever thought about creating a plugin that does this? Does anyone have any other suggestions other than just dumping stuff to DVD or tape backup.

  • Wes,thanks for the tip. I realize this is definitely a legitimate solution for the occasional use, but I’m talking several spots every week being done this way. This can be quite time consuming and I don’t feel its very realistic in my situation. Does anyone know of any other way to do this, whether its through final cut itself or through a third party plugin.

  • Josh Weiss

    November 2, 2005 at 6:58 pm in reply to: Kona 2 Problems with Playback

    It is set to all frames.

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