Or as Ferreira put it, an over 200% improvement. However, with NVENC turned on it finished in just 2 minutes 25 seconds. Not terrible, a bit faster than realtime on this machine. Without NVENC enabled, the export finished in 7 minutes 22 seconds. Ferreira’s first test was just a straight-up 10 minute 4K video without any effects or graphics. Now, you can use the GPU to speed up your exports. This means much better, smoother playback as you work. GPU acceleration isn’t new to Premiere, you can use it with the Mercury Playback Engine for decoding video as you work on the timeline. You will need a compatible GTX or RTX series GPU, but the differences between NVIDIA’s encoding, called NVENC, and standard Premiere is a game changer.īy taking advantage of NVIDIA’s NVENC tech, Premiere can use GPU acceleration to speed up the export process for H.264 and H.265 files. This means that Adobe isn’t even using the full power of your machine.įilmmaker Armando Ferreira is here to tell us about how a recent update to Premiere allows users to get dramatically faster exports thanks to a fun new NVIDIA technology. Premiere Pro has another unique issue by default that seems to limit exports to only use the CPU. It’s also just dead time since you generally can’t use the computer or perform other edits while it happens since it takes up as much computing power as possible. Among the most time consuming aspects of video editing is the export.
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