Made for everyone, Not locked down to a particular platform, AMD video cards, OSX, Linux, Unix, Solaris, IBM, FreeBSD, Intel, AMD, Samsung and maybe even BeOS! So you are saying that it is the the users of OSX products (or possibly Apple) are the ones making it hard by embracing OpenCL? I'm bored in bed and just had to sign-up to these forums as after reading Vladdies thought process on this thread. I have been running in NVIDIA OpenCL GPU acceleration. I completely erased my drive, have a new installation of OS X 10.10.4 and I do have this problem now. However, I have updated in order to troubleshoot items a bit better.
If it were me, I'd be running Premiere Pro CC 2014.2 on OS X 10.8.5 with NVIDIA CUDA enabled.
I'm running Premiere 8.2, MacOS 10.10.3, CUDA 7.0.52 and GPU Driver Version: 10.2.7 310.41.25f01.įor you and others on MacBook Pro and iMac computers, I would 100% agree with you. So even if CUDA is faster in a speed test, I personally find it's not suitable for day-to-day work, at least on my system. If I switch to OpenCL, I generally get better real-time performance, and far less issues and crashes. I'll get a lot of crashes, and weird render glitches. You can go into the Puget Systems database to see how that score system compares with other systems that have run this benchmark.For me, on my MacBook Pro (Retina, 15-inch, Early 2013, NVIDIA GeForce GT 650M 1024 MB), I've found using CUDA in Premiere CC2014 to be extremely unreliable. Once the benchmark is complete, a score will pop up. You can also find an explanation of the various tests that PugetBench performs and the media it uses. If you run into problems, Puget Systems has a bunch of troubleshooting recommendations on its website. Make sure you don’t move the mouse while the program’s running.
This is where you’ll enter your license code if you have one.
How to download PugetBench for Premiere Pro: Find the benchmark in the Creative Cloud app. Make sure it’s plugged into power and that all fan settings and power profiles are maxed out. The benchmark must be run from a local drive, rather than an external device.
Puget Systems is a PC manufacturer that specializes in professional workstations. One of the best ways to do that is the Puget Systems benchmark for Premiere Pro. If you’re currently a video creator or are interested in trying it out, you may want to know how well your PC can perform various tasks in Adobe Premiere Pro.