• Global community
    • Language:
      • Deutsch
      • English
      • Español
      • Français
      • Português
  • 日本語コミュニティ
    Dedicated community for Japanese speakers
  • 한국 커뮤니티
    Dedicated community for Korean speakers
Exit
0

Will AME ever support NVENC or VCE?

New Here ,
Aug 04, 2019 Aug 04, 2019

Copy link to clipboard

Copied

I have a relatively high performance computer, but it only seems like AME is getting slower and slower at rendering my videos. I am wondering if Adobe will ever support Nvidia's NVENC or AMD's VCE? I'm getting tired of sitting here for 6+ Hours waiting for a simple 5 Minute h.265 Video to render, only to find out that it failed. The worst offender was on a video of mine that was about 2 Hours long in 1080p60 with a Bitrate of about 150Mbps using the h.265 HEVC encoder, it took literally 8 hours to render and made it all the way to the end only for it to fail at the last moment. I would love to use the HEVC hardware transcoding feature that is greyed out on my settings, but unfortunately me turning on the graphics functions on my CPU would defeat the purpose of having two RTX2080s in my system.

Will there ever be any support for the GPGPU Hardware transcoding technology is my question? Or will I have to start searching elsewhere for my video editing needs that will satisfy my desire and need for quality AND speed?

If it helps to understand my frustration here are my system Specs:
CPU: Intel i7-6700k @ 4.5Ghz w/ Custom Liquid Cooling

RAM: 32GB DDR4 @ 3Ghz

GPU: RTX2080FE x2 in SLI

Primary Hard drive: 512GB Samsung Pro 980 SSD

Secondary Hard drive: Crucial 1TB MX500 SSD

Tertiary Hard drive: Seagate BaraCUDA 10TB HDD

I do a lot of transcoding work very frequently, and would love to be able to use the very real Hardware HEVC transcoding technology that I have in my video encoding work. I understand that h.264 is faster, and even if I use that one it still takes an absurd amount of time to export the video. I mainly focus on 1440p and higher video resolutions, and use very high bitrates and some simple Fx settings. Please Adobe as a long time customer, just support the NVENC and VCE hardware. If not create your own Transcoder that can leverage the GPU as a processor then. Don't tell me it can't be done if GPUs are being used for advanced Machine Learning, Linear Algebra calculations, Weather Simulation, Chemical folding, Physics Simulation and other forms of extreme calculation intensive workloads that demand accuracy.

Views

1.3K

Translate

Translate

Report

Report
Community guidelines
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn more
community guidelines

correct answers 1 Correct answer

Community Expert , Aug 05, 2019 Aug 05, 2019

This is a user-to-user forum, and while Adobe support does frequent these forums, the dev teams do not. The best way to get this request in front of the product teams is to file an official feature request (or vote on an existing one) on the UserVoice site: Media Encoder: Hot (405 ideas) – Adobe video & audio apps

Votes

Translate

Translate
Community Expert ,
Aug 05, 2019 Aug 05, 2019

Copy link to clipboard

Copied

This is a user-to-user forum, and while Adobe support does frequent these forums, the dev teams do not. The best way to get this request in front of the product teams is to file an official feature request (or vote on an existing one) on the UserVoice site: Media Encoder: Hot (405 ideas) – Adobe video & audio apps

Votes

Translate

Translate

Report

Report
Community guidelines
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn more
community guidelines
New Here ,
Aug 05, 2019 Aug 05, 2019

Copy link to clipboard

Copied

LATEST

I did not know this existed. And I had a hard enough time finding these forums too. Thank you. I'll skim through that sector of the site and see if anyone has put in a request to this. If not, I guess I could let my EET side shine and break down exactly what feature it is that would accelerate the Encoding process to a speed so absurd that the Solid State Drive would actually be the problem.

Votes

Translate

Translate

Report

Report
Community guidelines
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn more
community guidelines