Just make sure you've downloaded the right version. You can play the loaded. Click on the triangle icon of the "Format" to choose the wanted video format from the profile list. Please note that the the larger bitrate, the bigger file size while the better video quality. If interested, you can also check "Merge into one file" to combine MTS videos into a big one. Click "Edit" menu to do some premiere editing if you need before conversion.
Here, you can trim, crop the loaded videos. Might be a bit time consuming but it works. Just simple clicks, you will get the Adobe Premiere Pro supported editing video files. I personally convert. I have a similar model, and while it's not as robust as my desktop, it runs all the Adobe software quite nicely.
As a bonus, the laptop will get a free upgrade to Windows Am I missing something, I copy the files to the working drive from the card, and use a suitable preset and in they come? Where is the problem? Sign in Join. Sign in. Forgot your password? Create an account. Sign up. Password recovery. Recover your password. Get help. This topic has 1 reply, 19 voices, and was last updated 4 years, 2 months ago by Luke.
May 26, at AM Luke Participant. Can someone explain the best way to get my video into the editing software? Thanks, Luke. May 26, at PM Charles Participant. Woody Participant. May 27, at AM Ian Participant. Hi Luke The advice the others have given is correct. June 4, at PM I have CS5, running on Windows 7, 32bit.
All the apps I have and use are windows. I suspect they are all 32bit. When I convert. MTS to another format do I lose lots of quality?
That is my only worry. So you're saying that my best bet is to convert the AVCHD m2ts file to a format that Premier will support and then proceed from there?
It sounded like Vegas isn't a very extensive editing tool by what you said or were you talking about converting the file first and then editing it with Vegas to increase the performance of the program? Is there a format that you would recommend? I've read that where m2ts files were converted to AVS files which Premier supports? Is there a converstion program that you recommend that works well and doesn't lose much of the quality of the video?
Is there a conversion program that you recommend that works well and doesn't lose much of the quality of the video?
There is a demo on their web site that puts a watermark on your output and mutes the audio after 30 seconds. A: After Effects isn't designed for editing - it's designed to do fancy stuff to footage. B: After Effects CS3 can't import.
PRM plugin. The same is not true in the other direction. Consequently there is no "native" aka no reencoding method outside of Premiere. No percevable slow down, no limitations. Note: I've been applying filters to my work auto levels etc and thus I've always needed to RENDER an output so I can't comment on whether the Main Concept compiler that's what output renders are called in the Adobe SDK is smart enough to only COPY the source material if they are hard cuts ie no transitions and thus not have any quality degradation.
Try using Sony Vegas to convert to avi that Adobe Premiere can read. I've used both Sony Vegas and Adobe Premiere. Adobe Premiere is a much better program for editing and easier to use. Is Main Concept the only way to do this?
Does it truly allow native editing of these files? Even Sony Vegas seems like it does some conversion It's the only method I'm aware of and yes it does natively edit - no conversions, no temporary files. Oh, I have to tone down my reply from yesterday - I was doing some editing last night and yes, working with AVDHD does slow down the process a little.
It is a far more efficient decoder but unfortunately it doesn't help you in the Premiere workflow - it's just a player ie it doesn't help you open AVCHD in Adobe 'hope this helps a little. So do we need the pro plugin its waaaay expensive? I was hoping for every researcher to have this capability.
Pardon my ignorance, but is the standard MPEG2 from the HDD cameras directly editable or does premier convert it somehow when you add it to the project? Well here are your choices. These tapes were developed for Standard Definition camcorders and used the "DV" compression alogrithm. Hard Disk Drive versions are nice because you plug'em in and they come up as a drive. But you're not likely to edit directly from that camcorder's drive so in both cases you're still copying the source to your PC.
Personally if I had my choice again I'd get a HDV tape camcorder because when you're out shooting it's easier to put a full tape in your pocket and a new one in. At the end of a long day you don't want to be copying 60Gb from the camcorder to a harddisk. Lugging around a laptop to do it is a pain and there aren't many stand alone backup boxes with huge harddisks.
I'm guessing you don't have that limitation though so perhaps a full blown editing suite is not for you even pro-sumers rarely need it's features.
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