

Like the new Import and Export modes, if you’ve played with the Premiere beta recently you’ve seen this new header bar. Editors publishing to social media will probably like that those publish options have been moved front and center as opposed to buried deep.Īs we talked about last year, this will indeed make life easier for new editors coming to PPro.

Once again veteran editors will see a lot of the familiar switches and check boxes from Premiere’s old media export dialog box they are just arranged under new headings and twirl down menus. Similar to the new Import mode, the new Export mode puts a lot of the settings you need at your fingertips without a lot of jumping into pop-up dialog boxes. If you’re a veteran user then the things you are used to for importing media will still be there such as the Media Browser. Putting some of these tools like file copy, as well as sequence and bin creation front and center when importing media isn’t a bad thing. They are pretty self-explanatory and a bit of digging around easily reveal how they work.

If you spent any time in the Premiere Pro Public Beta over the last year then you have undoubtedly seen the new import and export modes. There’s a few other things but the main things that editors are going to key in on are the new Import and Export modes in the subtly redesigned interface.
#After effects vs premiere pro update#
For those who have been following the Premiere Pro public beta for awhile this update will bring some of those features to the shipping release (we talked about some of this last year when it came to the public beta), including the new Import and Export as well as a minor interface tweak with a new “header bar.” Beyond that we see the recent Frame.io acquisition start to take shape with all Adobe subscribers getting “unique access” to Frame.io as a value add to your Creative Cloud subscription. With NAB on the horizon Adobe has announced somewhat major updates for both Adobe Premiere Pro and After Effects.
