

Adobe encore cs6 mp4 pro#
There's nothing wrong with Premiere Pro at all, it's you that might need to get up to speed on how things actually work. So in the end, you might find that Premiere Pro is exporting using the correct hardware if you have one of those laptops with an iGPU and discrete GPU. Other NLEs might use the GPU and iGPU completely differently for exporting and supporting GPU accelerated effects processing, so keep that in mind.Įxporting in Premiere Pro, by the way, is a CPU-centric process with the GPU and iGPU providing mainly effects processing in the export process, and does very little to assist the actual encoding of the files. It should be set with hardware encoding disabled by default because of the codec you choose. If you want to export non-H.264 (like ProRes), you will be using the dedicated GPU, not the iGPU. Most people prefer the hit in quality to get faster exports, though. After that, you can edit all the MKV videos in Premiere Pro CC/CS6/CS5 to meet your multimedia needs. When the conversion completes, you will get high quality MOV videos by clicking 'Open' button. It will be of slightly higher quality, as the main benefit. When all the settings are OK, click the Convert button to start converting your MKV files to Premiere Pro editable files on Mac. You can switch it off, if you like, but the encode will take longer with the discrete GPU engaged. In Export Settings, hardware assisted encoding takes place and should be enabled by default. It's faster because it is using Quick Sync. If you want to export H.264, you will be using the iGPU not the dedicated GPU.

There is a lot of misunderstanding in this thread because a good number of editors do not understand how Premiere Pro handles handles GPU and iGPU assisted exports.
