Adobe Premiere 6.5: Upgrade or wait?

By
29 July 2002 02:30 PM
Tags: premiere 6.5, adobe, ulead, pinnacle, video editing, title
Adobe Premiere 6.5: Upgrade or wait?

From the looks of it, Adobe is turning a simple upgrade to its wildly popular Premiere 6.0 product into a major overhaul. Adobe hasn't released Premiere 6.5 yet, but our early look at the beta reveals what you can expect.

See changes as they happen
Premiere 6.5's biggest news is the addition of real-time previews, which let you view transitions, titles, and other changes instantly, without waiting for Premiere to render them. And speaking of titles, version 6.5 also includes the Adobe Title Designer, a slick tool that lets you quickly create sophisticated titles and credits within your movie. Unlike other titling tools, the Adobe Title Designer offers free-form vector tools for creating shapes or motion paths for your text.

Premiere 6.5 also gets serious with audio, adding--but only in the Windows version--three new audio plug-ins that provide reverberation, compression, and equalizer controls for all Premiere audio tracks.

Bundled DVD authoring
Catching up with every other video product on the market, the Windows version of Premiere 6.5 will now create DVDs from within the program by fully integrating Sonic DVDit LE for authoring capability. For Mac users, Premiere 6.5 does not bundle authoring tools but will work with either iDVD or DVD Studio Pro.

Adobe hasn't offered a firm time frame for version 6.5's final release, promising only that it will be in the fourth quarter of 2002. Premiere is available for Windows and Mac for AU$1,349, and upgrade prices start at AU$349. Check back for our final review as soon as the new version hits.

Advertisement

Talkback 0 comments

Reviews by category

Sponsored content

Power Centre - Content from our premier sponsors

Blogs

  • Renai LeMay How reliable is IP telephony?
    Have you ever heard a weird kind of hissing, crackling or popping noise when calling someone on an IP telephony line? How rare is the phenomenon these days?
  • Array Forget the NBN, 100Mbps is already here
    Telstra and TransACT will shortly begin offering 100Mbps broadband to many customers. By moving early, the companies have not only raised the bar for Australia's broadband services, but thrown down a challenge to a government that now faces increased pressure to deliver the NBN as promised.
  • Array IT: Govt's cost-cutting bitch
    The government needs to stop looking at IT as a necessary evil or the place to remove costs when the Treasurer comes calling.
  • More blogs »

Tags

Back to top

Featured