Brorsoft Video Converter V1.2 Crack

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Macabeo Eastman

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Jul 17, 2024, 8:51:15 PM7/17/24
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Both Premiere CC AND After Effects CC are not recognizing Pro Res ...heck it doesn't seem like they are recognizing QUICKTIME in general (both progams are rejecting a .MOV I have with the animation codec) ...

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When I try and open up a CS6 sequence in CC I get a message saying "The preset used by one or more of the sequences in this project requires third party components that could not be located." When you click ok just to get the project open, the media is offline.

When I try a test render out of AE cc the default Format is Quicktime, but when you go to the Video Output Format Options the Video Codec has the number "0" instead of a list of codecs .... and when you click on the "0" it changes to "-1". Seriously there are NO codecs listed in the Options - No ProRes, No Animation, just the number zero.

I'll just throw this out there, should anyone else stumble upon this. I'm plagued with Premiere CC 2014 suddenly not recognizing ProRes files. I've tried everything that I can find: preference & cache deleting, app reinstalling, killing the DVCProOutputThingamajiggy codec, etc.

2. Change the file name and relink. On a whim, I just changed the name of my file from "MonitorCam-Pt3_ProRes.mov" to "MonitorCam-Pt3-ProRes.mov"...essentially replacing the underscore with a dash. BOOM, clicked in. Why? Only the programming wizards will know.

I'm having this terrible .mov "corrupted or not supported" issue. But here's the thing: I have been working on a project for about a week or two (as well as countless others) on the same exact system and importing and using .mov files with no issue whatsover. Now, all of a sudden, this issue is happening.

It was happening in both AE and Premier. But now, for whatever reason, Premier is working fine. But AE is a bust. Both the CC version and the CC14 version. The only thing I have done to my system is do the upgrades via the Adobe Creative Cloud. Do I need to uninstall the older versions of After Effects?

I just imported 3 .mov files into my AE project - no problem. But when I now try to go back and reload or replace the files that are actually in my project, no good. Gives me the standard "corrupted or not supported"

I'm having the same error message "Reported a generic Error.." when I import my XML file from Davinci Resolve. It was working fine before.... somehow it just stop working correctly 2 months ago. Did I do something incorrectly?

As long as you have QuickTime installed, Adobe Premiere Pro supports ProRes .mov and most Quicktime codecs natively. If you've have QuickTime installed, but can't get files imported, you can try to get your MOV clips to be transcoded or rewrapped with third-party software before import. Handbrake is one choice. But here I especially recommend you to get a video converter app from brorsoft that comes with the optimal preset for Adobe Premiere Pro, which ensures the best result when working your MOV files in Adobe Premiere CC.

I reinstall all the suite. Still i can't import Prores files. What it's going up ? Whu Adobe can not give us a solution to that? Is a Yosemite problem? Is a ProVideo formats recently upadate to version 2 and 2.01 issue? PLEASE CAN SOMEONE HELP. All the suite useless cause all footage we work is Prores.

did you install the resets for your version of prores (with yosemite and or compressor 4/final cut x latest you will need cc version of ame presets for proper encoding; earlier os and compressor, use cs6 version)

4.No i did not install any preses. I did knew there are ... I read something here in the post but i thought it was for CS6 only. Sorry my mistake, where i can find that Presets. And u think that will help.

6. Then i was waiting about 30 mins and i finally i asking him if forget me or he is checking a solution? He answer to me that the issue must be the Pro Video Format 2 and i have to roll back to older vrs. I told him i dont know how to do that (except if i format the system) and he told me to ask Apple. And we closed .

Right click the Premiere.app and select show package contents, then go to Contents folder, Settings folder, Encoder Presets folder. Paste the same presets you installed for AME here. Restart. Open premiere, try to import the file into a new premiere pro project with no sequences. IF that works, move on to the next step. If not, you may need to go to apple site, get support there. You may try repair permissions on your hard disk, too. That may be the problem. If it's working now, you should be able to create your own sequence presets based on that. Basically, by dropping the presets in the encoder presets folder, you allow it to use pro-res for previews.

As for the import to AE... ...Have you tried roundtrip through Premiere? Load the file into premiere, then create a sequence from it, right click the clip, and then select REPLACE with AFTER EFFECTS COMPOSITION. If you do this and it fails, you know it has something to do with the codecs not being found by AE.

The only problem I can think of right now are the QT mini server that passes video out of qt is broken on your install. One test may show a difference... Look up how to hack pro-res onto mac without compressor, and install the old version of pro-res that way. You already have compressor, so I see no reason why you should worry about a licensing issue, you're just including an older version for cross compatibility. Once you install the older prores codecs, restart, then open up AE and try to import. Again, if this doesn't work, you can check for the qtserver link that reads\writes qt. You'll have to navigate the app package like I described for Premiere, and go to the Contents folder. Here you should see a file named SIMILAR to "Adobe QT32 Server.app", which is the QT messaging package. Go to the Frameworks folder, find the QT client Framework, and the QTPARSER, these are the command protocols that go through the QT Server (At least in CS6). Leave the frameworks folder, and go to the Plugins folder, then the MediaCore folder. You should have the QTExporter and the QTIMPORTER plugins. If any of these files are missing, you may not have a working install. So uninstall AE ONLY. Then Reinstall it. It should pick up your other installed EPR files, along with detecting the PRORES codec package, and should install the importer and exporter plugins correctly. If it does not, then recent APPLE updates have locked your codecs out of adobe, yell at apple.

Try using Quicktime itself to output a pro-res file. Try using Compressor to output a pro-res file. If you are setting the quality, Remember that Premiere and AE don't like long GOP settings. The lower your quality, the longer the GOP. Set between 70 and 100 for best results.

Hi Harley and thank u very much for your patience for all that. It is complicated and unfortunately i dont have the time to do all that stuff. I will format all the system and reinstall the Adobe suite without any Pro Video update and will see. Now these days i m working a project to another Mavericks Mac machine ... i hope Adobe to the coming soon updates fix all that.

I have heard that recent updates have fixed this on mac. If they haven't, my solutions still work for premiere. Once you are in premiere, you can go to AE and it will pick up the data from premiere about the QT files. With CC, and the prores coders from the Compressor and Final cut includes, you will have the ability to edit the files. However, (though several on other sites may claim windows runs prores) Windows does not have the latest prores edit capability that mac has. You will have to hack your machine to your own specific situation with regard to your specs, and you'll have to use FFMPEG, as the apple codec is the older prores codec. FFMPEG will allow you to edit the prores on win, but requires setting some values; not for novices. Use a mac, forego the trouble. Remember, that if you have trouble accessing pro-res in AE, you will have to re-encode the video for use with it, or hack it to allow pro-res.

Older versions of AE use the basic 32bit version of Quicktime server. This is currently not compatible with the newer codecs. Newer adobe versions do function correctly with new prores codecs, provided they are installed correctly, and that the presets for media encoder are installed. These presets are linked lists that forward sequence and comp data through the codecs. There may still be a copy of the 32bit server for older versions of the video files, and it might work with older encoded files, but I haven't seen any kind of reliability with it. Using only the new codecs has proven to be the best method. They will work with older files as well. On mac, if you purchase the advanced codecs, you'll need the presets that match in Adobe Media Encoder for reliable operation. On windows, the apple codecs are unreliable on their own, but you can fashion your own from FFMPEG. Installed first, FFMPEG will allow you to fashion some settings for prores. Here you'll have to look it up yourself. Once you've done that, install your video software (premiere, After effects, etc). There's also a preset that lets you link to FFMPEG in Adobe media encoder, running the linkage through FFMPEG and placing the files in the Broadcast folder under Apple Prores, for the basic output styles. For 444 camera data, you'll have to recode to 422 for use in your apps.

Anything less will cause problems. If you want to make sure of performance, 16-24 gb of ram and at least one xfire graphics card at 6gb will almost guarantee performance. More cooling will help, as well as maintenance.

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