The quality of those improvements, however, is very high. The big ones include Mac compatibility, variable-rate slow motion that produces an incredibly fluid effect, multiple project panels with improved search and organizing functions, and several editing and audio refinements.
Boot Camp is required only for OnLocation. The new slow motion capabilities are easy to use and produce stellar results. The clip automatically gets larger or smaller on the timeline. Results from our first test looked similar to video shot with a high-speed camcorder and post processed with dedicated hardware.
Can you tell that we were impressed? As projects get larger, finding and organizing assets quickly become more challenging. You can now search for a file or effect by simply starting to type in the name, and the assets matching that text string will become narrowed as you continue to enter text. This will not be a surprise for Mac users; however, PC editors will quickly wonder how they ever lived without it.
You can now organize your assets by views by separating out panels, each displaying clip information differently, say, both as a list and thumbnails. Working with audio and video in Premiere is now a little faster. Tracks nested in various sequences can now be played back without rendering. Look for more about Soundbooth in an upcoming issue of Videomaker. Very handy if you want to experiment with a few different takes.
We ran Premiere through both simple and complex editing sessions. No sweat for the simple cuts-only session. We then loaded a minute project that had dozens of various transitions, motion effects, graphics, titles and audio, some layered 7 deep. Again, no problems in either the creation or rendering once we got the kinks out of our hardware. The graphic located at the bottom of every video makes it easy to quickly scrub through each sub-lesson to find the specific task you need help with. After viewing this video, you will understand the basics of editing video using Adobe Premiere Pro CS3, including capturing and importing footage, managing clips in a project file, creating an edited sequence, timeline editing basics, creating titles and working with effects.
The video also includes a complete tour of the Adobe Premiere Pro CS3 interface, and will show you how to create a project and file structure, work with audio in the timeline, and output a finished sequence. For more than 15 years, Peachpit Press has helped millions of users—from designers to developers and more—get up to speed on all sorts of computer programs. The new Video QuickStarts provide a quick, convenient, computer-based alternative to learning your favorite creative applications.
Tomcat is a web server popular with Java programmers and system admins who need a superior …. User-friendly interface. Moving away from multiple windows in previous versions of the product, the developers came up with the option of transformable bookmarks in their own way and took a slightly different path, namely, the convenient path of creating a transformable multi-window interface.
As a result, you can easily customize the workspace to your needs, without any clutter. Interesting work with audio. The audio part in Adobe Premiere CS3 is solved in quite an interesting way. This is a kind of standard Windows drivers.
Integrated workflow. This program integrates with other products by Adobe. In this way, users can have better workflows and do their projects with fewer breaks in the process. Also, the team members can easily connect to each other without the necessity to quit the application, using the Microsoft Team integration.
This allows them to share their thoughts about the projects and the managers to check the work of each member of the team. Multiple file formats support.
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