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Can anyone advise if quadro t2000 gpu on a mobile is supported by adobe premiere. I cant see it on the recomended list but this xard was new in May 2019
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It is a very safe assumption that the T2000 will eventually be approved as recommended, but Adobe does do feature testing on the cards and they make sure there is a stable driver version before putting it on the list: Important Information on GPU and GPU Driver Requirements | Adobe Blog
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Hi cjacs987654,
Can anyone advise if quadro t2000 gpu on a mobile is supported by adobe premiere.
Are you using Premiere Pro or Premiere Rush? If Premiere Pro, 2+ gigs of GPU VRAM should be good.
Let us know more about the system specs and the exact name/version of Adobe application that you have.
-KS
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Hi.
Thanks for your reply.
Premiere Pro cc 2019.
Dell 7540 e-2286m xeon. 8 core. 16m cache 2.4 to 5ghz
32gb memory and the quadro t2000 gpu with 4gb
Thanks
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what a coinicidence
we had exactly the same question today for a laptop decision. (HP-ZBook)
We could ask some very involved developer, and that brand-new chip (turing generation ) is one of these who are fully compliant. The chip, paired with a driverversion higher then around 420...something is the best you can do.
The driver is crucial for Cuda9.2 or higher compatibility (the current turing-chip supports even cuda 10.x)
That, surely will not guarantee that PPro will be able to playback smoothly without dropping frames, but there is no higher known spec which will.
If , despite that card, you are experiencing, jerky playback, then no other card will help you.
Your specs , as I can see, are quite similar to ours but keep in mind... if you are using the XEON-version, you will not have any "hardwareacceleration".
Therefore, we decided for an I9.
But as I said ..... if it drops (and it will) ... the stereotype answer frome some dedicated people here will be..... your fault...you are using non-professional codecs....use proxyworkflow....
wanna make a bet .... ?
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Lots of reasons why a system might drop frames...
I don't see any information on what you're doing with the system...HD? 2K? 4K? mp4? raw? Heavy effects?
Hardware info without use case is hard to evaluate.
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It could be a number of things if dropping frames occurs. And the fault comment is just weird to me. I don't think most of us here think of blaming anything, it's just trying to find what *works* in any particular situation.
Sometimes a format/codec like long-GOP H.264 is a problem on account of the nature of that format, designed for fast encoding to small space via a dedicated chip in the camera for only that purpose. Which is freaking hard to de-encode bits of as NLEs do while splicing the bits together.
With that media it will normally have to de-encode quite a bit more than the trimmed bit of clip in order to recreate the needed frames.
RED high-k RAW media is also a slog. I have colorist friends with massive computers to be able to handle the heavy RED and Arri media, but they still transcode H.264 to say ProRes422 when working whether in Resolve or Premiere.
But choke points because of lane routes on the mobo can even be an issue.
None are anybody's "fault", they just are things to know and *manage*.
Working a pro video post app whether Premiere, AfterEffects, Avid, Resolve, Filmlight ... at times takes thinking and planning for workflows.
Neil
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This thread is woefully off topic now. OP was asking whether the new Quadro T series would be a recommended graphics card for Premiere. We have sufficiently answered whether the hardware is theoretically capable of that recommendation (yes), but we still need to wait on Adobe to complete their testing and approve it for recommended use.
The recommended graphics cards list was last updated July 25, 2019: Adobe Premiere Pro System Requirements
The Quadro T2000 has not made it to the market yet, you cannot purchase it yet, so sit tight. Check back on that System Requirements web page after the graphics card is available to the public.
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The Adobe staffers primarily rely on the basic capabilities of a card for use ... if it meets all requirements, it normally works. They really don't test cards much.
So ... that card should work. No one has been complaining of not being able to use it. And I know of people using new RTX and Ti cards that aren't formally listed either.
Neil
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It is a very safe assumption that the T2000 will eventually be approved as recommended, but Adobe does do feature testing on the cards and they make sure there is a stable driver version before putting it on the list: Important Information on GPU and GPU Driver Requirements | Adobe Blog