Adobe has recently released a promising new version of Premiere Pro. Aside from new features, version 22.2 of the popular video editor also brings some major performance improvements to 10-bit HEVC encoding on Intel and Nvidia GPUs.
Thanks to the implementation of HEVC 10-bit 4:2:0 hardware encoding on Adobe Premiere Pro 22.2, Nvidia and Intel GPU users can benefit from performance improvements when using the video editor tool to edit clips. Looking at the graphs below, you can see that exporting on a workstation equipped with an Nvidia Quadro RTX 5000 is up to 6x faster compared to Premiere Pro 22.1.1. The other graph below shows that a typical Intel laptop configuration is now over 13x faster than when running the previous Premiere Pro version.
The update also optimised speech to text for offline use, now with transcriptions being up to 2x faster on AMD processors, up to 3.2x faster on Intel-based systems, and up to 3.6x faster on Apple devices using the M1 chip. In addition, it also introduced Remix, a tool that helps you find cut points or loops, retime and rearrange songs in just a few seconds.
Adobe Premiere Pro 22.2 also brings some beta features, like Auto Tone, which applies intelligent colour corrections in the Lumetri Color panel so you can rearrange it to your liking. Moreover, there are also improvements to import mode, including sorting options, marquee selection for choosing media, keyboard navigation, and much more.
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KitGuru says: Do you use Adobe Premiere Pro? Have you already updated to the latest version? How fast can you export a video using HEVC 10-bit 4:2:0 hardware encoding?