cnv wrote in post #9274375
I use premiere pro CS3 and CS4 for all of my work and I have never had a problem with .mov files. It all depends on the original codec though. Sorry I am not much help there.
I guess you haven't tried editing HD video in either then, especially high bitrate ones like 5d and 7d 
chrisb321 wrote in post #9008130
A few weeks ago I upgraded to a 7D and I thought I would give the DSLR video world a go.
I fired up Premiere for the first time with a copy of the premiere pro cs3 bible book and went to work making my first video. Turned out OK but I have a lot to learn.
A couple of small things that I have found bits of info on but no clear instructions.
> Editing the compressed MOV files in Premiere is choppy. I have read that it is best to convert to another format prior to import. Does anyone have a specific method/workflow for this (hopefully free or cheap)?
> My book recommends starting a new project in the same framerate you recorded in 24/30/60. Makes sense. Does it matter if I am working in 24 fps but want to put in some 60 fps footage, that I may want to slow down to 50%?
> Regarding changing the speed of clips. Is there certain increments that you should try to keep to? For example if I have a 60fps clip should I only stick to 25%, 50%, or 75% speed changes or does that not matter at all?
Thanks for any help and sorry if these are duplicates of old questions. I must have missed them when searching.
Editing h264 files at high bitrates will always be choppy even on good machines because premiere doesn't support DXVA (mainly because macs don't support it, and adobe has always had platform independent features). There are a few ways around this, the most effective of which is to use premiere to re-encode the video to a intermediate file (if you don't care about space, uncompressed is fine, if not, mjpeg, restricted mpeg 2, and intra-frame codecs are best). You can also use CS4, 4.2 for premiere pro with certain geforce and quadro fx video cards, and adobe supports gpu acceleration for those cards only.
In general, stick to multiples of your lowest frame rate for video, or else you'll end up either dropping frames or multiplying them to get your video. Sometimes (well, more than sometimes if you know when it's worth it) it's fine to drop or duplicate frames, so don't worry all that much about it unless you are doing production work (in which case you wouldn't be asking the question here anyway)
I don't hate macs or OSX, I hate people and statements that portray them as better than anything else. Macs are A solution, not THE solution. Get a good desktop i7 with Windows 7 and come tell me that sucks for photo or video editing.
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