![]() I did have one crash the first time I opened Premiere, but I’ve closed and reopened it many times since then and it hasn’t repeated. Of course the previous version of Premiere sits alongside 2014, so I was able to go back into my old project when I needed to gather some details to recreate one of those upgraded plugin effects.Īll told, it has so far been relatively painless. I immediately had to download new versions of and reinstall my plugins (and in one case buy an upgrade) to get everything to work properly. Next I installed Premiere Pro 2014, and opened up a recent project to putz around. ![]() I’ll spare you the laundry list of changes (if laundry lists are your thing, check out Apple’s product page and Lifehacker’s Top Ten Hidden Features), but I do like the changes to Spotlight, and why on Earth it took them this long to make the Full Screen button actually make an app go full screen, I’ll never understand. Although the update is listed as beta, it seems fine so far. (I gather this feature has been available on Mavericks for a while, but since I never use Apple Maps, I only found it when it got added back to my dock.)Īfter that I had to download and install an update to TotalFinder (my older version was broken on Yosemite, and I simply cannot be without it for a moment). I installed Yosemite this morning, and promptly spent an hour on Apple Maps doing 3D flyovers of various cities. And with MPEG Streamclip dead in the water, I had to begin looking for alternatives. I long ago ditched Final Cut Studio, so Compressor is no longer on my machine. Still, I was much relieved knowing the audio was there now it was just a matter of getting to it. But VLC is just a player, not a transcoder… Then on a whim I tried VLC, and sure enough, VLC could read it. I tried opening the card in MPEG Streamclip, but for all its Swiss Army-like beauty, MPEG Streamclip won’t read AVCHD files. (I used to use Apple Compressor to import my AVCHD footage before moving it over to Premiere Pro for exactly this reason.) Panicked googling led nowhere, largely because the search results were dominated by an old bug in Premiere CS6 that refused to import audio from any AVCHD footage ever. This is a camera, SDHC card, and transcoding workflow I have used 100’s of times I have never had a problem like this. But for some reason, a few minutes into the clip, it just disappeared. This was a clip I had shot myself, so I knew the audio had been recorded properly. I recently experienced a shock when I discovered one of the clips in my Premiere Pro project was missing ~90% of its audio. Hope this helps someone in the distant future. Everything worked swimmingly the second time. The solution was to individually select all of the nested sequences in Project Manager and do the archive over again. ![]() So, for whatever reason, Premiere Pro’s Project Manager fails to recognize and transcode nested sequences inside of nested sequences. After a while I gave up, went back to the original project and cracked open the two broken nests to find… more nests! I went directly to Google because I am lazy and this is 2017, but found nothing. (I.e., transparent video.)īut two other nests had come over just fine, so confusion ensued. They were represented in the timeline by green clips with diagonal stripes throughout, and behaved as if they simply weren’t there at all. ![]() I thought everything had gone smoothly, until I noticed that two of my nested sequences hadn’t come across properly into the new project. I was archiving a project this morning in PPro CC2017.1 (the latest as of this writing), using the “Consolidate and Transcode” option.
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