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Participant
May 8, 2018
Question

Wow. I haven't used Premiere in some time.

  • May 8, 2018
  • 2 replies
  • 264 views

Wow. I haven't used Premiere in some time. I sat down today to edit some AVCHD .mts video from a Panasonic camera. I thought about upgrading from CC2017 to CC2018 and discovered - and correct me if I'm wrong on this:

  1. Without warning Adobe decided to remove it's Dolby codec from any future upgrades? Seriously?
  2. So anyone working with certain .mts files had to scramble to find a fix?
  3. And that fix entails either upgrading yer OS or dialing back to CC2017?

It just boggles my mind. I wonder how many human hours were wasted across the globe on this.

Is it possible on MacOS if you haven't upgraded to High Sierra to copy and paste the older framework into the new CC2018?

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    2 replies

    Participant
    May 8, 2018

    Yup., stay with earlier version for now. I had to upgrade for client's so I got stuck.

    R Neil Haugen
    Legend
    May 8, 2018

    This situation was a result of a legal scramble between Dolby Laboratories (owner of the ac3 audio) and Adobe. NOT something just done by some Adobe staffer being thoughtless. The lack of public comment clearly was ordered by the "Legal" guys in dark suits & red ties that have no sense of humor.

    But it isn't an Adobe choice ... it was something that came from Dolby it would seem, including apparently an order to remove all ac3 code ... period, and ... NOW. Neither company has any staffers commenting on it. A particularly nasty legal bug, it would seem. I've never seen staff so completely absolutely tight-lipped on something, both at MAX and at NAB.

    And you're right, it's been a huge pain for anyone using ac3 audio material. So you have to figure a workaround that gets a ton of stuff transcoded or audio conversions/re-linking quickly.

    Neil

    Everyone's mileage always varies ...
    jmcg2222Author
    Participant
    May 8, 2018

    Wow and just... wow. Of all the Adobe update snafus since I started working with Premiere 4.1 - I can't remember a time when they just shut a feature down that is so integral to this kind of workflow. Not as bad as the Final Cut debacle of yesteryear - but still pretty crazy.