![]() I edit with Premiere, which happily* gobbles up the 10-bit files these days, so I can manage to edit them in the end. It may very well be that if you don't optimize using FCP but instead EditReady, you end up with a cropped set of data:Īxel, that is ridiculously helpful, thank you. Official support means (or is supposed to mean) that the data are interpreted correctly. Many wondered why Premiere first played back GH5 10-bit clips, then the following update didn't anymore, and then the next update officially supported it. VLC - accept the underlying H.264 but ignore proprietary metadata for, say, XAVC with it's own color science of x.v. Don't know about EditReady.Īs far as transcoding with third-party apps to ProRes is concerned, I became aware of possible downsides since the once popular 5D2RGB transcoder, which for none-Canon cameras often didn't interpret the range correctly which resulted in degraded clips. HLG clips are still not supported in Kyno 1.4. The very same version of the third-party-app Kyno used to repeat the Finder warning unsupported file type, unable to play back (or so), but now miraculously (just after a restart of the app) shows them, you could say reluctantly. And indeed, Finder / Preview / QT player now play back a greater variety of video files (they used to reject naked, unwrapped mts-clips, for instance), but specifically not some of the 10-bit GH5 files (and others). ![]() Since Yosemite, allegedly, the whole OS (and OiS) uses it as framework. You didn't mention if you edit with FCP, which uses AVFoundation. ![]()
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