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Hello!
Does anybody here has experiences with working with 4k source material on a Macbook Pro 2012 (mid 2012) unibody?
Is that possible anyway?
My question acutally relates to two different Macbooks:
1. Macbook Pro 13 (mid 2012), i5 2.5Ghz, 1 TB SSD, 8GB RAM (my current macbook)
2. Macbook Pro 15 (mid 2012), i7, 2.6Ghz, 16 GB RAM
For full HD my current Macbook (no. 1) was good enough, as I only use it for cutting simple videos (only one camera, no effects).
With 4k video sources I don't get a flued video preview, so I can't work with it.
I would be great to know, if upgrading to a used Macbook Pro 15 (no. 2) unibody would allow me to do this. I know that the latest unibody models from 2012 have a NVIDIA GeForce GT 650M.
I really love these old unibody macbooks due to their upgrading and maintanance options, so I would prefer it over a newer retina model.
Hope anyone can help!?
The short answer is no. The older MBP's are way too under-powered for 4k editing. There's a workaround though. You could use the proxy workflow. Transcode all 4k material to 1920x1080 pro res and you should be able to edit smoothly on a 2012 MBP.
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The short answer is no. The older MBP's are way too under-powered for 4k editing. There's a workaround though. You could use the proxy workflow. Transcode all 4k material to 1920x1080 pro res and you should be able to edit smoothly on a 2012 MBP.
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New participant here. My teen daughter has outgrown the limitations of iMovie and we got her the Adobe suite. She seems to have longer workflow times/rendering time/more crashes with Premiere Pro. She's using 1920x1080 source material, generally from an iPhone XS. She has a 2016 13" MBP with 8 gigs of ram. I am unsure if that is too underpowered and have similar questions to the OP. Is an upgrade in order for a 16" MBP or maybe an iMac?
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Here's the major problem when dealing with iPhone XS footage:
No wonder why these smartphone video formats are so tough to handle, even on a monster PC. Your best bet is to transcode these files using a third-party program to another, less-compressed, CFR file format.
As for the hardware upgrade, right now the only feasible upgrade without having to spend potentially tens of thousands of dollars (Mac-wise) would be a 16" MBP. The iMac is a carryover from the early 2019 model, and as such uses old-generation GPUs and last-generation CPUs.
With all that said, you might want to hold off until the new ARM-based Macs are released. Intel-powered Macs are right now at a dead end. Apple will not develop or release any more new Intel-powered Macs, while minor refreshes to its existing line will continue for a couple more years.
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Thank you! We'll try 3rd party conversion to CFR.
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