I have a new 2 month old 15" MBP. I Was working on a project, macbook volume was about on half, when suddenly an audio bug occurred with really loud screatching noise and not letting me pause it. After it stopped, the speakers were really quiet, and after the next restart they're clearly blown. Initially I blamed the hardware, though the same thing happened a day later with my Sony 1000X-M3 headphones, luckily the headphones are ok, but that did give me a heart attack.
UPDATE: Adobe had a small number of user reports about an issue in Premiere Pro that could affect the speakers in the latest MacBook Pro. Adobe has released a patch via the Creative Cloud app to help address this issue. Please update to 13.0.3.
If the Macbook Pro is only a couple months old, Apple should repair the speakers for you at no charge (although you'd have to check with them). I just purchased a 15" Macbook Pro myself (this weekend), so if you can think of anything specific that led to the audio screeching, I'd like to know what it is! Same footage/same point in the timeline? Or just a random thing?
Although we're not officially Adobe here, there are some Adobe people who visit on occasion. If you can narrow this down to "when ___ happens, the screech sound appears," it should definitely be reportable as a Premiere bug.
I just blew my speakers (Macbook Pro 15" 2018) on Adobe Premiere. They are permanently Damaged. I was using the Adobe Premiere 2019 Audio suite for background sound and while tweaking the settings it made a loud distorted noise that hurt even my ears. after that my speakers are unusable.
Same here. I just bought a 15" 2018 Macbook Pro last week and it has happened twice in Premiere Pro. I am not easily startled but this scared the s#!+ out of me. The first time it made a loud snappy pop sound and the audio stopped working. The second time it made a terrible distorted sound at full volume, even though my volume was very low, every time I tried to playback a clip with audio. I immediately quit Premiere and went to youtube via chrome and the audio played as normal. So freaking weird. This has only happened when using the built-in speakers. Has anybody had this issue with headphones on?
Same thing happened to me. Brand new 15" MBP (2018). Editing a clip in Premiere. Had been using bluetooth earphones, but then shut them off. Came back to Premiere after a bit, hit spacebar, and got the awful noise. Hit space bar immediately to stop. Music track had "music" attribute applied to it. Was not doing any input. Speaker volume, when tested with Spotify/iTunes was very quiet. Reset nvram, speakers back to normal volume, but rattle coming from right side. Extremely upset. Currently on assignment in India, so hope I'm not up a creek. Not sure who's responsible, but this one is pretty unacceptable. Really bummed.
I agree with you and I agree that these issues are separate, as I experienced the same issue as you my speakers were definitely blown as well. I will get my laptop back from apple on monday - hopefully fixed. However, I do not know what steps to take to prevent this from happening again.
Same thing happened to me yesterday. Really scared. I was working on Premiere Pro editing with my mac pro 2018(pro vega20) (3Pro!!!!!) and I worked with really small volume cause it was in the middle of dawn. Whatever,when I hit space,A VERY LOUD freaky sound was made from the top- right side of macbook(so I made a guess that it was from the charger or touch bar but it might be not).It sound like 50 times bigger of tape rewinding, or electiricity. I was really frightened.
I have the exact same spec MacBook as the OP. I was editing a simple video and went to clean up the audio in the audio tab and like everyone else the playback was at max and completely blew out the speakers. I could even smell an electrical burning smell. I took it to apple the next day and they sent it out to be repaired under warranty (awesome on their part.)
I got the laptop back a few days ago, and everything was fixed. Still weary this could happen again, I kept the volume on my laptop low and didn't mess with the audio tab. The only modification I made was a 3db volume adjustment. About 20 minutes ago it happened again and although I stopped it immediately, the right speaker is now blown out.
This is ridiculous, I don't know who's fault this is, but it needs to be fixed. I edit on this laptop for school, work, and personal use. Between the three there is no room for downtime. Someone is dropping the ball here.
So Ive commented a while back where this has happened twice to me already. Now, I always use external speaking and I always turn them OFF before I change any kind of audio, which sucks. I have paid good money for both the macbook and the entire suite, there should be no reason why this is still a problem. That's my rant. I talked to adobe and all they could think of was that it is my audio hardware setting that messed it up. They had me change my default input to no input and assured me that the problem was solved I don't know if it has fixed the problem or not cause I always use external speaking when editing videos now. If anyones speakers have blown and their default input was on "no input" please share on the form I would love to know if this really did fix the problem.
Where is the consumer protection on this issue? At what point does it become a legal issue? Apple and Adobe blaming each other, or playing dumb. $7,000 computer for me. Nothing more than the option to repair it, with no solution for the root cause, and no protection after warranty expires. It has happened more than once to some here. Everyone here has a 2018 MacBook Pro with the new speakers... sure seems like Apple is to blame.
I've recently started using a software that notifies me once the camera or microphone on my laptop become activated, since I am concerned with how privacy is handled by software companies. I was very surprised to understand that the mere fact of starting Adobe Premiere Pro up activates my microphone immediately and continuously. This means the software has access to the mic audio *simply by running*.
Assuming that this feature is intended so that the user can record audio directly into Premiere, it should only become active once the recording process is actually starting. This is self evident to me.
Skype, for example, activates the microphone only when a call is effectively established (not even when it is ringing), which is how it should be. Adobe is not taking my right to privacy seriously and I request an answer on why this happens and an urgent fix.
I'm afraid the only other advice I can think to offer is not to run Premiere Pro on a Laptop. The ideal starting point for editing is multiple internal hard drives and a 24" 1080p screen, which no Laptop in the world offers.
I appreciate your helpfulness, Jim. I do disagree with your "starting point" statement (peripherals take care of everything you mentioned), and Adobe can't assume that people are editing on a desktop.
I know this post is a couple of years old now but changing my Default Input to No Input like this actually works on a laptop now (Premiere Pro 2020). Just putting it out there in case anyone else has an issue with this in the future.
IF it's not spyware, why can't I even hear premiere's audio when I turn off my "microphone access for this device" in windows settings? forcing users to have their microphone on for such basic functionality of the program is not only unfair and doesn't make sense, but it's also compromising my privacy by forcing me to keep the microphone access on for no apparent reason.
I personally can't think of a single reason for this, other than spyware. I am being forced to give microphone access to gain basic, unrelated, functionality that should come as a given
I highly doubt it is actually using your mic. It would have permission to use it, which of course isn't the same thing. And with any experience of computer apps, between the handshaking between the OS and the various apps & subsystems, something that was listed as 'currently using' a computer resource may no longer be using it, but ... the link showing it as such wasn't officially terminated.
And with several million daily users, they have no interest whatever in anything you say heard by that mic. And no use for it either. No way to 'capture' even, nor transmit the signal. A big ... nothing.
I think OOTB you can use Adobe Asset Link to connect AEM to other Creative Cloud solutions but Adobe Premier Pro is not one of them, you can check more here: -manager-learn/assets/creative-workflows/adobe-ass...
Can you describe a little bit more of what would the scope of your integration? If you want to simply upload videos once are fully created through Adobe Premier Pro, you could use the Asset API to upload that file into AEM you can find more details here about that use case: -to-aem-as-a-cloud-service-asset-upload-http-api-fc560f....
Haven't been using Premiere for long, more intensively over the past few days. What I experience is, no matter really the file or resolution with which I am working, at a random moment, be it closing the program, opening a dialog box, choosing an effect (not these specifically, it can be anything at that particular moment) after working for an inordinate amount of time, the whole program, including my complete system, freezes. This includes movement of the mouse. I have to restart the computer completely using the power button each time. Not sure again if others are experiencing this problem but I'd be interested to know.
b37509886e