![]() Premier needs to explicitly support them though for the encoding to be done on the GPU, NVIDIA has nothing to do with it. ![]() ![]() I don’t know if premier supports it, there are h264 encoding libraries for the GPU (there is a nice one from elemental, there is an internal one from NVIDIA). The software needs to explicitly use the GPU to get any use of it. The GPU doesn’t automatically take any job from the CPU and specifically it doesn’t automatically take over encoding from the CPU. What you showed is that you enabled the GPU for playback not for encoding. I´m not being able to feel the “smooth editing” and “smooth encoding” bla bla bla Nvidia spreads to sell the new Fermi Cards…Help!!! Hey Nvidia, how the hell we really “activate” CUDA GPU processing? All my Premiere and AME settings seems to be OK (Adobe Mercury Playback Engine GPU is ON). The entire load is upon the processor (an OC´ed Q6600 Core2Quad 3.2Ghz). I have the latest drivers installed and it´s like all my 256 CUDA cores are sleeping. It´s taking almost 5 hours to encode a 2.5 hours content to Blu-Ray format (H.264 Blu-Ray HQ 1440X1080). I just bought a Quadro 4000 and have the same problem here. Soo… Did I completely miss the use of Cuda or something is wrong ? NVIDIA Compatible Windows7 Display driver, Version 258.96 NvCplUI.exe 3.3.532.01 NVIDIA Control Panel Before updating my Hard Drive, CUDA acceleration worked fine. The book C++ AMP by Kate Gregory and Ade Mil. Todays GPUs (2nd half of 2012) can and many do comply with IEEE 754, which is a standard for Floating Point arithmetic computation, but not everyone does. I recently replaced my main hard drive with programs/OS and reinstalled a lot of things, but other than that Ive had no hardware changes. Answer (1 of 4): There is a historical reason for this: GPUs have favored speed over accuracy. NvCplUIR.dll 3.3.532.01 NVIDIA Control Panel Ive been scratching my head today trying to re-enable my GPU acceleration on Creative Cloud (Premiere and Media Encoder CC 2015). Mémoire graphique disponible totale :Ē811 Mo Horloge de mémoire :đ242 MHz (2484 MHz débit) Système d'exploitation : Windows 7 Home Premium, 64-bit Processeur : Intel(R) Core(TM) i7 CPU 920 2.67GHz (2673 MHz) Here’s the detailled information about my NVidia Stuff (gotten from the control pannel, in french, sorry) : Rapport Informations sur le système NVIDIA créé le : 16:22:53 My i7 920 is completely taken by the video encoding… But, where’s the GPU ? I don’t really understand ! I do my stuff with my video… I choose some H.264 codec to encode my video, and export it with Adobe Media Encoder (hell yeah, you recognized, it’s a 3D Vision video capture) :īut look at the time ! 3 HOURS ! And, at the same time I though that my processor’s fan was getting louder… Indeed : So, when I created my project on Adobe Premiere, I made sure that the Mercury GPU thing was selected : I’ve seen anywhere on the internet that Adobe CS5 (especially Adobe Premiere and Media Encoder, as I’m doing video editing) support Cuda accelerated video encoding… Well I thought that would be great but actually, since I’m using it, it’s apparently not working the way it should :-/Īs I write this, I’m currently encoding a video, and I’m making some “live” screenshots right now to show you what I mean. Hi everybody, I had a little question for you.
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