Adobe Premiere Pro CS5.5 and W520/Quadro 2000M
Posted: Sat Jun 04, 2011 10:13 pm
Just got around to trying the Adobe Premiere Pro CS5.5 trial. This version finally extends their "Mercury Playback Engine" to include some notebook CUDA processors, including the Quadro 2000M. The results with just a single test encoding are pretty impressive. The encoding time dropped from 44:53 to 17:22... not 1/3 the time but significantly better than 1/2. (It might even have been better, except I neglected to set the computer to "Maximum Performance" until the CS5.5 encoding was most of the way through pre-processing the audio.)
The source video is standard definition AVI files from Mini-DV rendered down to 320x240 15fps Flash video (On 2 VP6) with both "Maximum Render Quality" and "Frame Blending" turned on. The video is nothing fancy... a talking head with a few cards overlaid at the beginning and end. The CUDA-enhanced "Fast Color Corrector" is applied to the entire track to compensate for the room lighting.
CPU utilization was about 100% of all 8 cores, usually at about 116% clock speed (i7-2820QM). Files are on a eSATA HDD which doesn't seem to have been a bottleneck.
These renders used to take my previous computer (T61p) about 8x real-time; to see it drop to faster than real-time is quite remarkable. Not sure it's really worth a $500+ ugpgrade from CS5 (Master Collection) for me (I render only about 30h of video in a year), but it's tempting.
The source video is standard definition AVI files from Mini-DV rendered down to 320x240 15fps Flash video (On 2 VP6) with both "Maximum Render Quality" and "Frame Blending" turned on. The video is nothing fancy... a talking head with a few cards overlaid at the beginning and end. The CUDA-enhanced "Fast Color Corrector" is applied to the entire track to compensate for the room lighting.
CPU utilization was about 100% of all 8 cores, usually at about 116% clock speed (i7-2820QM). Files are on a eSATA HDD which doesn't seem to have been a bottleneck.
These renders used to take my previous computer (T61p) about 8x real-time; to see it drop to faster than real-time is quite remarkable. Not sure it's really worth a $500+ ugpgrade from CS5 (Master Collection) for me (I render only about 30h of video in a year), but it's tempting.