Is it possible to get that old functionality in CC 2015? Am I just missing it somewhere? In the help documents for 2015, it seems to suggest ASIO hardware options are only available for Windows and CoreAudio only for Mac. Therefore, even if I have changed my system output to be line out, Premiere continues to just use the headphone output. There is a Device Class dropdown, but the only option I'm given is "CoreAudio." In the default input and output options below there is no option to respect the system's input/output. In CC 2014, under Audio Hardware, there is an ASIO Hardware section where I was able to set the Adobe Desktop Audio to "System Default Input/Output." This was perfect because if I changed my system output from headphones to line out, Premiere would follow suit.
There seem to have been some big changes in the Audio Hardware preferences in the jump from CC 2014 to CC 2015. NOTE: Keyframing in a "fade out" does not affect a clip. Just wanna see if others can replicate this issue as it was not present in previous versions of Premiere. In fact, if you adjust your fade in to start at say 25% then when you extend or shorten the beginning or end of the clip, you then see the preview of that clip at only 25%. Normally any time you adjust the length of a clip by dragging the clip in or out, you see the edit point adjust in the preview monitor. We keyframe in lots of fades on our projects but I've found in CC 2015 (9.0.2) if you add a fade-IN at the start of the clip, then when you drag the beginning OR the end of the clip either way to EXTEND or SHORTEN the clip you suddenly CANNOT see the clip's preview in the Program Monitor. Is this a CC 2015 Bug? Wasn't in CC 2014. RESULT: In CC 2015, for some reason you CANNOT see the edit change/adjust in the Program Monitor now as you move the clip in or out. STEP#2 - Drag the beginning OR the end of the clip in or out STEP#1 - Add a clip to a sequence and keyframe a FADE-IN. I don't do much audio so I can't really test the OMF to see what is happening. So what is Premiere doing? Very frightening. I export the exact same media (using an FXP XML from Premiere) and the OMF comes out perfectly. I can assure you I have NO audio clips with that name. I have no idea what this means and I have no idea how it affects the exported OMF.
That means we need 259459 samples in the source file. The offset into the source file is 0 samples. When exporting the OMF with trimmed audio selected, I consistently get the following popup:Įvent Media length is not equal to Actual Media length! I am trying to export an OMF from Premiere Pro CC, whatever the latest interation is.