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Adobe ae cs6
Adobe ae cs6





adobe ae cs6
  1. ADOBE AE CS6 FOR MAC
  2. ADOBE AE CS6 UPDATE

ADOBE AE CS6 FOR MAC

Nevertheless, thank you for the suggestion. Adobe After Effects CS6 for Mac provides you with professional tools for creating special video effects and making complex video edits. The only other thought I’ve had is that the graphics card manufacturer, in my case EVGA, might have worked something into their design which somehow blocks the information being returned to AE’s ‘sniffer’. It’s weird! I think all I can do is hope that Adobe will at some point do whatever they need to do to have the GTX 660 Ti recognised. The ‘sniffer’ executables are apparently different: I tried copying the one in Prem Pro to the appropriate AE folder, but in order to run, it needed two.

ADOBE AE CS6 UPDATE

That version of GPUsniffer.exe found the CUDA processors without a problem, and Prem Pro shows it will use the GPU for rendering etc. Adobe After Effects has a huge user base in the motion graphics and animation sectors, so any update to the power of this venerable compositing workhorse will be.

adobe ae cs6

I had a look at the equivalent files for Premiere Pro CS6. Tthe AE version of GPUsniffer.exe in the same folder still does not recognise my card as having CUDA processors. I’ve read the article you referred to, and tried it again, after checking for and downloaded the latest driver for the card from the NVIDIA website. I’d tried amending the ‘cuda_supported_cards.txt’ file in Adobe\After Effects CS6\Support Files and it hadn’t worked. Does anyone please have either an explanation for the AE response, or a fix? that after doing so and resaving the file, AE recognises their card and its CUDA capability. Other people have found this to work - i.e. It was suggested on another forum that I edit the file raytracer_supported_cards.txt which is in C:\Program Files\Adobe\Adobe After Effects CS6\Support Files to include the GTX 660. It is possible to run the samples supplied with the CUDA Toolkit, and an application called CUDA-Z functions, both of which seem to suggest to a non-programmer like myself that the 1,344 CUDA processors on the card are working just fine. I have installed the latest Nvidia driver, 310.70, and the CUDA Toolkit v 5.0. Having done so, AE ( Edit > Preferences > Preview) has consistently refused to recognise the card, and I am looking for advice on what I can try next.įor information, my PC system involves Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit, an Asus P8Z68-V/PRO/GEN3 MoBo, 16GB RAM, and the new graphics card, a NVIDIA GeForce GTX 660 Ti (2GB DDR5). Having invested in Production Premium CS6 this year, I wanted to make the best of it, and upgraded both motherboard and graphics card to take advantage of the promised CUDA processing.







Adobe ae cs6