If you are looking to buy Adobe SpeedGrade CC 2014 8.2.0 for Mac then you have come to the right place to save big on retail price. Simply add Adobe SpeedGrade CC 2014 8.2.0 for Mac or any other software titles to the shopping cart for even more volume savings and checkout easily.
Wow! This was not what I expected.
This week, I want to compare the compression speed of Adobe Media Encoder CC (2014) (AME) with Apple Compressor 4.2 when encoding files for YouTube using a new Mac Pro, a 21″ iMac and a 15″ MacBook Pro.
For the last year or two, AME was the hands-down speed champion. But Apple touts the new speed of Compressor, so it was time to test them both. This article is part of series looking at Apple Compressor:
This article compares the compression speed of Adobe Media Encoder 2015 (Fall) with the Spring and 2014 releases.
This article compares the compression speed between Compressor 4.1.2 and Compressor 4.2.
This article examines image quality in the latest version when compressing files using the H.264 codec.
This article compares the speed between a new Mac Pro, a 21″ iMac and a 15″ MacBook Pro using Apple Compressor 4.2.
This article compares whether enabling multiple instances in Compressor speeds up compression on either a MacPro or an iMac.
Adobe SpeedGrade CS6 color grading software brings the Lumetri™ Deep Color Engine to your production workflow. Open the full dynamic range of your footage through a sleek new interface. A new component of Adobe Creative Suite® software, SpeedGrade gives you the power to push your stories further. Adobe Speedgrade cc crack 2014 is a shade rating and full editing that become Good program offering layer-based coloring modification and look for design tools to make sure that electronic video tasks are creatively reliable and successfully powerful. Adobe SpeedGrade CC 2015 9.0.0 is a third party application that provides additional functionality to OS X system and enjoys a popularity among Mac users. However, instead of installing it by dragging its icon to the Application folder, uninstalling Adobe SpeedGrade CC 2015 9.0.0 may need you to do more than a simple drag-and-drop to the Trash.
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
What’s the fastest compression software? Well, it depends…
The new Mac Pro was the fastest system for Adobe Media Encoder, while the 15″ MacBook Pro was generally the fastest system for Compressor. (And, no, I didn’t expect that!) What makes this especially interesting is that the iMac had the faster processor, while both the MacBook Pro and iMac had identical graphics cards, though the MacBook had more VRAM memory for its GPU.
The fastest setting for Compressor was 1-pass VBR. However, the default YouTube setting for Compressor is 2-pass VBR, which more than doubles compression time.
AME defaults to 1-pass VBR encoding, but that generated excessively large files. Excluding that one setting, file sizes for all different compression methods were with 5% of each other. If you are compressing with AME, be sure to use 2-pass encoding, which, also, is not the default setting.
Different codecs compress at different speeds. For example, the MacPro really struggled with XDCAM EX, while the iMac and MacBook Pro breezed through it.
2-pass compression roughly doubled compression time; however, for AME this is a good choice to reduce compressed file sizes.
Running multiple instances of Compressor only boosted the speed of the Mac Pro. For both the iMac and MacBook Pro, running multiple instances slowed performance 300 – 400%.
NOTE: This test used the same YouTube compression setting for all systems and all tests. While this does not yield the smallest file sizes, a 10 mbps bit rate will yield excellent image quality in all cases. So, no quality determinations were made.
Click here to download a PDF of all my findings so you can check my math.
TEST SYSTEMS
Late 2013 Mac Pro Yosemite 10.10.3 3.0 GHz, 8-core Xeon processor 32 GB RAM AMD D700 GPU
Late-2013 MacBook Pro Yosemite 10.10.3 3.1 GHz Intel Core i7 16 GB RAM NVIDA GeForce GT750M GPU with 2048 VRAM
Clips. I tested clips using three different codecs: XDCAM EX, ProRes 422HQ and ProRes 4444. Two clips had native 720p images. The other two clips were scaled to 1280 x 720 during compression. Clip durations ranged from 4 minutes to 48 minutes.
Compression settings. AME defaults to 1-pass VBR with a 16 mbps bit rate. Compressor defaults to a 2-pass VBR with a 9765 kbps bit rate. I tested both 1-pass and 2-pass VBR, with a standardized bit rate for both applications. In all cases, I used the default YouTube 720p compression setting and only modified the bit rates to match at 10 mbps. Max and Min settings in AME were identical at 10.
Compression times were reported by the application. No other apps were running during compression. Only one setting was applied to each clip. Clips compressed individually, no two clips compressed at the same time.
Compressor was restarted when I changed the number of instances.
NOTE: I have been asked to run these tests on an older Mac Pro. I tried. But I couldn’t get Yosemite to run on my 2010 Mac Pro. I would expect old Mac Pro times to be about double the iMac compression times, because it can’t take advantage of the hardware acceleration built into Compressor, and its GPU is slower than the new Mac Pro.
PERCENTAGE ANALYSIS
Here is a summary of what I learned. Green bars indicate the fastest results in each category. Because AME has been the fastest system, I set its 1-pass VBR setting to equal 100% and compared everything else to it. Faster compression speeds will be smaller than 100.
Single-instance, 1-pass VBR compression in Compressor was the fastest option of the six tests for every system. However, this is not the default YouTube setting for Compressor. If we compare the 2-pass default settings, AME is faster for the Mac Pro, while Compressor is faster for the iMac and MacBook Pro.
What really struck me, though, was how slow multiple instances of Compressor made the application. If you are compressing multiple files at the same time, this option may make sense – I didn’t test for that. However, given the performance hit created by running multiple instances, I would be very cautious in recommending this option.
How To Use Adobe Speedgrade
ACTUAL TIME ANALYSIS
I calculated this section by totaling compression times for all four movies compressed on each system (Total Time). For completeness, I also averaged compression times, but the results were the same.
The MacPro was the clear winner when compressing for AME. But dead last when compressing using Compressor. This is because the CPUs for the iMac and MacBook Pro provide hardware acceleration which is missing from the Mac Pro.
In fact, I was stunned to see the MacBook Pro won every Compression speed test when in single instance mode.
CODEC COMPRESSION TIME PER SETTING
I also wanted to test the impact codec (video format) had on compression speed. In this section, I show how long it takes to compress a minute of each codec using each of the six tested settings.
I wasn’t surprised that XDCAM EX (a variant of MPEG-2) took longer to compress. What DID surprise me was how much slower ProRes 422 HQ was to compress compared to ProRes 4444. In all cases but one, ProRes 4444 was the fastest codec.
CODEC BY SYSTEM
I then compared the compression speed by codec for each system. Here, I used the 1-pass single-instance compression results in Compressor to compare systems and codecs.
This dramatically illustrates the speed of the MacBook Pro and the speed differences inherent in each codec.
SUMMARY
Click here to download a 4-page PDF detailing all my findings, so you can check my math.)
This test took most of three days this week – I’m glad I did it, but it took a long time. Here’s what I learned:
The new version of Compressor is light-years faster than older versions. I am upgrading all my systems to this version this week. There is no reason to wait.
If I’m using Compressor for YouTube, I suggest changing the YouTube compression setting from 2-pass to 1-pass. This cuts compression time in half yet yields good image quality.
If I’m using AME, I’m lobbying for a new Mac Pro and changing the YouTube compression setting from 1-pass to 2-pass. This runs a bit slower but generates MUCH smaller compressed files.
I see no benefit to using multiple instances in Compressor. This needs some additional testing, but, currently, I’m not impressed with the performance I see. (I didn’t test network compression, that’s on my list for the future.)
While the MacBook Pro stands out as a fast compression system, I’m probably going to use a Retina iMac as my main compression engine; mainly because I have a bunch of them and I only have one laptop. The difference isn’t that great, in general.
While ProRes 422 HQ is slower to compress, it is the best codec to use when editing files shot by a camera. So, I don’t necessarily plan to change output codecs for my editing. But I will use ProRes 4444 whenever it makes sense.
BIG NOTE: Adobe is a few weeks away from releasing a new version of Adobe Media Encoder. I’ll keep these results and media on file and test to see how the speeds of the new version of AME compare to this one.
As always, I’m interested in your opinions.
Bookmark the permalink.
The SpeedGrade CC (7.2) December 2013 update will be released today. This update focuses on performance enhancements and bug fixes for the Direct Link workflow. This SpeedGrade update is just one of the pro video updates coming today, including releases of Adobe Media Encoder CC, After Effects CC, Prelude CC, and Adobe Premiere Pro CC. Please make sure you install Adobe Premiere Pro CC (7.2) before using Direct Link with SpeedGrade CC (7.2).
Adobe after effects free for mac. SpeedGrade CC (7.2) will be available for download via the Creative Cloud desktop application.
What Happened To Adobe Speed Grade For Macbook
As a rule, updates will appear in the Creative Cloud desktop application within 24 hours of being made available. If you are checking for updates in the Creative Cloud desktop application, and they don’t appear, restarting the application can force it to check for recent updates.
You can also download the SpeedGrade CC (7.2) update packages directly for Mac OS or Windows.
If you have any issues with this release, please bring questions and issues to the SpeedGrade forum.
SpeedGrade CC (7.2) Release Notes
1. Playback performancein Direct Link This release offers improved playback performance in Direct Link for virtually all supported formats. Performance for XDCam, Canon MXF, H.264, ProRes 422 and 444, DNxHD, ARRI RAW, Sony MXF AVC 2K, and others now fully leverage the Mercury Playback engine.
SpeedGrade CC 7.2 also improves playback with masks applied, although there are still some dips in performance when using masks.
2. GPU acceleration for Direct Link SpeedGrade CC 7.2 extends GPU acceleration to the Mac when using Direct Link.
Enabled: NVIDIA OpenCL (Mac) GPU acceleration is now available for OS X 10.8.5 and higher. This provides better feedback and real-time grading update when applying color adjustments.
Enabled: AMD OpenCL (Win) GPU acceleration is now supported
Note: GPU acceleration for NVIDIA CUDA and AMD OpenCL are not currently available on the Mac platform.
Adobe Prelude
3. Other Direct Link fixes and enhancements SpeedGrade CC 7.2 offers numerous performance improvements for a smoother Direct Link workflow.
Improved: SpeedLook .cubes converted to .ITX format. This reduces LUT file size for better performance. Improved: Mercury Transmit performance with OpenCL is improved
Added: support for Sony RAW
Fixed: Issue causing crashes with XDCAM footage Fixed: Keyframing now works correctly with trimmed clips Fixed: Issues with displaying correct Pixel Aspect Ratio of Premiere Pro footage inside SpeedGrade Fixed: Issue causing Mercury Transmit to crash on Mac Fixed: Masks displayed incorrectly on Mac in .look preview mode Fixed: applying a .look with Mask on Mac was causing crashes Fixed: a bug which prevented user from adding a mask in .look preview mode. Fixed: Copied .look with keyboard shortcut was not applied properly Fixed: UI refresh issue when enabling Mercury Transmit caused image flickering in some instances Fixed: issue causing application to crash when renaming a .look in Direct Link CPU mode Fixed: Copying grades with keyframes now works correctly Fixed: Save Dialog will now prompt to save grading changes when switching between sequences in Premiere Pro Fixed: Issue whereby preview settings from a previous IRCP project session were still displayed in Direct Link Fixed: UI bug in ColorMatch controls has been repaired Fixed: “Save As” window opened when clicking “Save” for overriding IRCP projects