

It’s been a while since we last updated this review, and Adobe does a big update at least once a year. You can run Premiere Pro on an Apple Silicon M1-based Mac, though, as the support page states: ”Native support for Apple M1 CPUs is not yet available but you can run Premiere Pro in Rosetta 2 emulation mode on Apple M1 devices.” Adobe states on its Apple Silicon M1 support page that it’s actively working on giving its apps native compatibility. It also requires a minimum of 8GB of RAM (16GB recommended), and a 1,280-by-800 display. The cross-platform program runs on macOS 10.14 or later and on Windows 10 version 1803 or later, with the 64-bit versions required.

Longtime pro video editors who are used to traditional nonlinear digital video editing will applaud Premiere's familiar approach, but Final Cut, in its favor, offers innovative tools like Connected Clips, Auditions, and a Trackless Timeline that can ease organizing and editing. While Apple made a drastic break with the past when it updated Final Cut Pro X, Adobe continues to take an incremental approach, by polishing the interface and adding state-of-the-art tools to its professional video editing software. All of this makes Premiere well worthy of an Editors' Choice award for professional-level video editing software.

Since our last look at the massive application, it has added: the Auto Reframe tool enhanced HDR support new text, graphics, and audio tools performance improvements and many other features.
MULTICAM EDITING PREMIERE CC HOW TO
