
Video Production Article Responseġ0 days after Ozer’s Benchmark Tests article was written there were several comments about render times but no one was willing to provide any of their own benchmarks to back-up their comments and opinions.

I did not contribute to his article nor have I spoken with him or anyone at Streaming Media Producer or Adobe with regards to the article in question and am writing this all on my own while I wait for a few GB of video to finish uploading before I can quit for the day. I guess he is probably still upset at Apple for killing Final Cut Pro and replacing it with a consumer application called Final Cut X but he was a bit rude in his comments.įull disclosure: Like Jan Ozer, I am a writer for Streaming Media Producer, and he disclosed in his article that the article in question was specifically sponsored by Adobe. I wasn’t expecting the stream of comments and bashing that ensued though from an individual who is a Final Cut trainer. I wasn’t too surprised by the results and appreciate that Ozer explained his testing parameters so that users would be able to compare his benchmarks to their own. The first step is to figure out whether it is just incompatible, or if there's something wrong with my individual computer.8 Core 2009 Mac Pro with 2.93 GHz Zeon 5500 processor Video Production Article Discussion

It's hard to believe that there could be a modern computer on which Premiere Pro doesn't run at all. The automatic Intel tool confirms that my video drivers are current. Intel's website says that the HD 4000 supports OpenGL 3.3 Adobe's website says PP6 only needs OpenGL 2.0, so that should be okay. Sony had me reinstall the video driver, but other than that has no suggestions. (Don't suggest that as a solution to the problem that driver doesn't support my external display). This is an error users get when there are permissions problems or out-of-date video drivers, but I've verified these are not issues for me.Īdobe tech support claims that my computer or its video driver does not support OpenGL, based on the fact that PP6 does run with the default Microsoft VGA driver.

I get the message "no capable video play module" whenever attempting to run Premiere Pro CS6 (since installation). Is anyone with HD 4000 graphics successfully running Adobe Premiere Pro CS6? I'm using a Vaio Z (2012 version, SVZ) with HD 4000 graphics.
