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Author
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Topic: All In Wonder w/Premiere?
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ZIMZAM
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posted 01-17-2000 04:08 PM
Can someone tell me if the ATI All In Wonder card is compatible with Adobe Premiere? A friend of mine just bought a new computer w/ said above utilities, but it keeps crashing when running Premiere. I have a Raptor card so I have no experience with the A.I.W. card. I can't seem to find out on the Adobe or ATI site a compatability listing, so if someone can tell me I'd appreciate it. Thanks. |
Frank Milne
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posted 01-17-2000 05:29 PM
I've found that you can't edit in premiere with the ATI VCR 1 and ATI VCR 2 codecs. They cause the crashes you describe. My solution was to either have a powerful system and save all work in YUV raw or another general codec or capture and save in VCR1 or VCR2 while using the ATI VCR, then open in the packaed MGI videowave2 program and resave the film in a general codec for editing in premiere.------------------ "I like to see things as I remember them, not as they were." -Bill Pullman "Lost Highway" |
Loring
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posted 01-18-2000 04:07 AM
I just emailed Ati a week ago, and this is their response that I have received this evening: Regarding GPF at Kernel32.DLL when try editing video with Adobe Premiere 5.1: 1 - Double-click on MULTIMEDIA in Control Panel. Open DEVICES tab, and then open VIDEO CAPTURE DEVICES. Make sure ATI Video Capture device is listed and it is enabled and set as the default video capture device. 2 - Use ATI TV Program to capture video and save it. Then try opening and editing the captured file with Adobe Premiere, see if the issue persist. Based on the information in the problem report file, your ATI AIW 128 PCI card and its software are configured properly.
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Loring
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posted 01-18-2000 11:53 PM
Well, I tried that, and it still crashes So I just emailed them again, and they will hopefully reply with another answer. |
charos
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posted 01-19-2000 04:54 PM
I use this configuration for DV editing, and it works great. I did have to get updated drivers from the ATI site due to some graphic problems, but the system is quite stable and reliable.
------------------ - Bill Carpenter Athena Productions |
Loring
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posted 02-08-2000 07:50 PM
I also found out that in 10 days Windows 2000 comes out and it is sooooooooooo stable you will never, ever, ever, ever have computer crashes! I heard this from a certified beta tester. |
lyvewyer
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posted 02-08-2000 08:18 PM
umm.... windows and never crashing dont belong in the same sentance together. i mean, i got nothing against windows, well actually i do, but lets face it, it sucks. the other day i had 17 blue screens of death in under half an hour. i might get win2k, my friend has it and says its cool, but i dont know yet, im in the middle here, i hate macs and windows, and my parents are not that tech savvy, so i cant get linux or anything. hhrrrmmmm------------------ I was normal once..... I didn't like it. check my site www.angelfire.com/al2/NOViCE |
NJRFilms
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posted 02-08-2000 08:55 PM
And windows 95 is a revolutionary step from 3.1 and 98 fixed thousands of 95 bugs and now 2000, it will be very stable and secure.... uh hu. yup. sure/ |
Suspiria
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posted 02-09-2000 02:44 PM
I have the same problem. The only way I can get around the crashes is to....1) Capture file with ATI VCR 2) Open the file in Premiere. 3) Before doing anything with it, export it using a generic codec. 4) Close the file. 5) Open the new file. I have never had a crash this way. I have also had success capturing my film directly into premiere although I get periodic crashes.
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dead_body_#ONE
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posted 02-09-2000 03:37 PM
I am writing this from Windows 2000, one of only three schools in the country to run it. I have to say Windows 2000 is head and shoulders above all of the previos versions, and I'm a Linux user. It isn't really Windows though because it is based on NT technology. Basically they just call it Windows 2000 to sell it under the Windows 9x name. It's a great operating system, extremely stable. I have never experienced a crash. |
Chagatai
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posted 02-09-2000 04:07 PM
Folks:I have an ATI All-In-Wonder 128 with 16 MB RAM. I have had the same problems you guys have had with Premiere crashing. But, I did find a way around it. When you set up the card, by opening the "Television" program and right-clicking on the screen, there is a tab for setting up your card. Go through the setup, and set the default capture to MPG1. Finish the rest of the setup normally. Set the Video Capture options to the default, but make sure it says it will capture in MPG1, not VCR. I capture at 320x240, 30 fps, and when I play it back full screen using a standard codec like Cinepak, it is impossible to tell the video from the images from the VCR. Make sure when you save your clip, save it as an mpg, too, otherwise you're likely to get that flangin' VCR1 setting. When you have the clip saved, open it in Media Player, and make sure it works. Sometimes this can be tempermantal. For my sanity, I make sure I save it again, using media player. Let me know if I can help you out any further on this. ------------------ --Chaggie
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