Hi Uwe,
Can't say I know the specifics, but it looks like the good old 'upgrade'
mode has taken place here, I.E. they forgot or didn't include that (and
maybe other) codec's, as usual.
As a side note, I reinstalled XP Pro on this machine a while back, to SP3
from SP2, now I cannot play WMA (native Windows??) files at all in the
Windows media player.work that one out..
Must admit, that 'hack' with the CUDA support worked the first few times on
the laptop (for AVCHD real time rendering), but hasn't since. Waiting 45
mins for a render that used to take under 6 really sucks. Might be worth
seeing if the 5.2 upgrade does the trick for both of us? (Hopefully it
won't downgrade us this time.)
Otherwise you might need to tell CS5 that you want to use that codec,
however you do that, or maybe, just maybe, your graphics card doesn't
support it? (Or Adobe thinks it doesn't?)
I really get on well with the software and all its features, it's a hell of
a lot more stable than it used to be, when it works, it works well. Its
just a shame (like everything else) it does have its (now small) proportion
of bugs. Stick with it.
Barry.
Barry,
I get the message when when I point CS5 to the file.
I think though that I found the problem but don't have a solution yet.
I get the message only with that one file, the others are ok.
When I skipped the file the rest opened ok.
That specific file (54min) has been rendered from 3hours trimmed clips
before. When I rendered it I used the lagarith codec at a fairly high
bitrate so as not to loose quality. I have installed the codec but do
not see it
in Premiere. I imported the clip into a new project but only get audio.
The file plays fine in Media Player (picture and sound) so the codec
seems to
work with Win 7 64bit but Premiere does not seem to see it.
Uwe
> Do you know the original path to the CS4 media? (File structure.)
>
> Not sure if 32 to 64 bit Win changes the file structure, or if Adobe
> CS4 to
> CS5 does, but it sure seems that way somewhere along the line. The new
> (from the old) path to the files is what you are looking for. Find
> them and
> point CS5 there and all should be OK.
>
> You may have to find out what the CS4 file system was and replicate
> that in
> the new install, that's if CS5 will allow the migration. (Usually there
> 'should' be some backwards compatibility, never 'forward', so even
> exporting
> the files in CS4 for use on 'other' PC's wouldn't of worked in my mind for
> CS5.) Otherwise do a few simple projects, find the files and their
> structure then copy and attempt to mimic the path with the old files
> in the
> new software. If CS5 uses a different file system entirely and converts
> things into different files then I think that's the end of the project,
> although I would like to see otherwise for your sake at least. Has anyone
> else had this?
>
> I guess you didn't do a fresh install, just an upgrade?
>
> Good luck.
>
> Barry.
>
>
>
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