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We are doing an event for a client who is a MAC house. All the editors are FCP - and Adobe Premiere. I have done a bit of poking around, looking for a good way to transcode the VMixAvi into ProRes422 on the Mac. Not finding anything promising.
THanks anyone that might have a workable solution. I appreciate your time!
Thanks,
Have a great week.
Chris
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Joined: 3/20/2014(UTC) Posts: 2,721 Location: Bordeaux, France Thanks: 243 times Was thanked: 794 time(s) in 589 post(s)
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Why not recording ProRes in the 1st place ?
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1 user thanked DWAM for this useful post.
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I think ProRes recording takes more toll on the CPU. https://www.vmix.com/help23/vMixVideoCodec.htmlConverting vMix AVI files to ProRes MOV vMix includes a program called vMix Media Converter that can transcode multiple vMix AVI files to ProRes MOV files. This program can be located in the Windows Start Menu.
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1 user thanked dmwkr for this useful post.
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Quote:I think ProRes recording takes more toll on the CPU It does for sure but if the computer can do it, there's not need for post transcoding
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Joined: 4/21/2020(UTC) Posts: 9 Location: California Thanks: 2 times Was thanked: 1 time(s) in 1 post(s)
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YES, we have really performant machines. PRORES is deffinately not a good solution. Even with our machines, you get a CPU spike when recording ProRez. IF you tax your processor to much, the records will suffer. Not a good thing when a client is expecting something usable. we are running the show at 1080p @59.94hz.
OUR studio Machine is.
AMD EPIC 7502p External cooling 128GB DDR4 3200MHZ Nvidia RTX Titan - 24GB Memory and a bunch of other stuff.
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Drat, I came here with pretty much the same situation, was hoping to find an answer. Dropping a comment to follow along and see if anyone has a solution.
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Rank: Advanced Member
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Joined: 3/20/2014(UTC) Posts: 2,721 Location: Bordeaux, France Thanks: 243 times Was thanked: 794 time(s) in 589 post(s)
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Quote:I came here with pretty much the same situation, was hoping to find an answer. ??? 2 solutions were given already! What do you expect? Quote:YES, we have really performant machines. PRORES is definately not a good solution. Even with our machines, you get a CPU spike when recording ProRez. I have done ProRes recording multiple times... on a pretty old i7 computer. Never had an issue... Usually on my system ProRes needs 15 to 25% CPU, on your beast it should be much less with your 32 cores (I have 8)... On my system, it runs fine for hours, even with a 50 inputs project (well designed and optimized, I'm not crazy) while streaming on GPU of course... I don't think the total load load exceeds 55/60% CPU which is still pretty safe. Not a big deal... Did you just try ? Unless your project is huge or you need multirecording, I guess your machine can natively record ProRes without a glitch. Testing is the answer... and the only way to go for you to know...
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