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Participating Frequently
March 11, 2019
Question

Enable Intel Quick Sync Video / QSV for quick H.264 output?

  • March 11, 2019
  • 1 reply
  • 5206 views

I can't seem to find this anywhere, in any search, so is there any way to turn on this hardware support for relevant Intel CPUs so that I can get quick'n'dirty outputs out of CS6, rather than wait an eternity for software-only, perfect output that aren't mission-critical?

Not all notebooks have dedicated graphics, so it would be nice to use such equipment to output youtube-friendly stuff on the move that doesn't have to be pixel-perfect, won't take forever and a day, doesn't gobble down the battery, and makes use of built in hardware codec on relevant chips.

Surely this is possible, as I've seen methods on CC, but as anyone in this forum knows, the point is to make use of already paid-for software.

Thanks in advance.

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1 reply

John T Smith
Community Expert
Community Expert
March 11, 2019

CS6 is from 2012... long before that feature was available in Intel

If you want new hardware support, you are going to have to subscribe to the latest program

LeungDaAuthor
Participating Frequently
March 11, 2019

While I appreciate that QSV was relatively new, it was already available on Sandy Bridge as of early 2011, which was before CS6 was released.

That being said, if Adobe simply never made any provision whatsoever for it, well, then you're right. Just seems like it can't be that big of a change.

John T Smith
Community Expert
Community Expert
March 11, 2019

>seems like it can't be that big of a change

I don't work for Adobe, so this is all based on my personal observation of software development

The initial issue of Premiere Pro CS6 is dated March 2012 (based on looking at the DLL files in my install folder)

Having been a programmer (different language, not the C and/or assembly language used in PPro) and also having been a Beta tester for programs (not allowed to say which ones) I know that the source code for a "release candidate" is locked in place weeks to months ahead of a program's release, to allow for testing and bug fixes... which would have been sometime in 2011 for CS6

Due to that timing, new hardware is not always going to be added to source code that has been in development for several months

So I am not at all surprised that the code to use that new Intel capability was not added to CS6