It records 4K 16-bit RAW or 1080p in SR Codec in MXF file format. In addition to conventional video outputs the F65 supports a complete file-based workflow. The Sony F65 is one of the new high resolution and high dynamic range cameras that are replacing film for theatrical production and also finding applications in broadcast. Has anyone gone through this process and know the plug-in I need? It would be a massive help! Apparently there's a plug in but I haven't been able to find it. Hi, I'm trying to import F65 SR footage into Adobe Premiere Pro CS6 and Premiere doesn't seem to take the native. Perhaps there is some transcode step I am missing? Can you help? Thanks. Trying to pull in footage shot with a Sony F65 ( mxf) and get ingest errors/failure with both Prelude and Premiere Pro. I could add another when I get serious with video, but for now will suffice with a portable USB3 enclosure from Orico.Importing Sony F65 MXF footage into Adobe Premiere Pro CS6 on Mac I use the Pegasus J4 with Crucial SSDs for audio-read purposes, really like it. The main advantage of the iMac is double ram capacity, if that matters to you. Its lighter/thinner, has an extra thunderbolt port, and gets rid of the optical drive which serves better as external since rarely used. I DO NOT regret spending more for the retina. You can change the SSD later if you want to save some bucks. I maxed out everything on my rMBP, most importantly the ram and cpu. The CPU between the cMBP and rMBP are generally the same, though better thermal design of the retina helps it perform better. I've used Cuda while demoing Octane Render, which definitely prooves that the GPU can run laps on the CPU in rendering. Yes, Cuda is supported on the rMBP, in fact Nvidia has their own preference pane for this. I'm entry level where digital video production is concerned, but a guru of music production and mac configs/mods. Thanks for any tips ya'll can give, excited but nervous since I haven't purchased a new laptop in quite a while! I think I want the rMBP for the thinner frame and gorgeous screen, but want to make sure I'm not missing essential features the regular MBP would have (let alone the regular MBP is less expensive) Any suggestions/thoughts on cost comparisons of upgrading to SSD vs getting it in the rMBP would be helpful. Does anyone have first hand experienced if this GPU does CUDA acceleration? That's a huge need in any next Mac I purchase.Īs for the difference in SSD in the rMBP, I'm planning to upgrade the HD and RAM if I purchase a regular MBP. Do the regular MBP's not have turbo boost? It seems like all MBP's have the exact same processors.Īlso, the GPU in all the MBP's looks like its the same (NVIDIA GeForce GT 650M with 1GB GDDR5 memory). One key difference is that on Apple's website, it says the rMBP have "turbo boost" up to XX speeds, but it does not give this feature to the non-retina MBP. I don't currently have any portable Mac laptop solution for editing and am trying to decided between the rMBP and regular 15" MBP. Personally I would suggest holding off unless you honestly feel that 30% difference is going to affect your production.Ī follow up question. Honestly though outside of bragging rights his machine isn't making him any more productive with CS6 then my machine. A friend of mine just bought the 15" retina and CS6 allows him to use OpenCL or CUDA for acceleration so it appears the OpenCL is opening up a bit. If that is the case then I doubt you will see a huge performance increase between the CUDA support and your current OpenCL support in CS6. If I recall the 15" wasn't supported for whatever odd reason. Now since you are a CS6 user like myself do you have support for the OpenCL acceleration on your 15"? I have the 2011 17" and can use full GPU acceleration with the special openCL Mecury engine support Adobe created for these machines. To some people that 20% to 30% means a lot although I personally question if it really makes them more productive or if they just think they are. They are definitely faster but still only about 30% compared to your current machine. The same goes for the latest top of the line iMac. If all you are doing is ingesting and light cutting then I doubt you will even notice a difference. If you are doing extreme rendering with corrections in the field then you may be looking at about 20% to 30% faster. Even internal drive speed is going to be marginal since you already have SSD drives. The 15" retina is faster but not enough to justify the cost to upgrade. I hate to tell you but the CPU and GPU isn't going to be that much faster to really make a major difference.
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