Click on any phrase to play the video from that point.
[♫Music playing]
[ADOBE TV Presents Colin Smith in]
[STUPID QUESTIONS]
No stupid questions. [STUPID QUESTIONS]
[NO STUPID QUESTIONS]
Two reasons I'm excited today:
First of all, I get to demonstrate on an amazing piece of hardware--
the HPZ800.
This is the exact system I use at home in my studio.
The Z800 has 16 cores; we've got 24 gigs of RAM in this machine.
But you know what--you can put up to 192 gigabytes of RAM.
If you think After Effects is slow, wait till you see it on this Z800
It's wicked fast, and everybody wants After Effects to be fast.
Okay--the second reason I'm excited--
I get to show you the brand new Adobe Media Encoder 5.5.
We've got some amazing updates, lots of speed,
and we're going to just zoom through some of these After Effects comps.
I'm not going to use the Render Queue inside After Effects.
Instead, I'm going to use Adobe Media Encoder.
The footage that we're using is 10 bit, 4:2:2 Full-HD quality.
We've got live keying with Key Live, and I'm going to be exporting out multiple versions.
Let's go have a look and see how my project is set up.
We got help from our wonderful guys here at Adobe TV.
They're my little standing cast here--
I wanted to show 4 separate output iterations.
So in this comp I've got someone in the front
and a background color.
And we've got that duplicated each time
so I'll be turning on and off each one of these layers;
and you can see that they're being keyed out live with Key Live.
Okay--so I'll choose File and Save.
I've now saved this project to disc.
What's sitting on the disc right now the state that this comp is sitting in.
So that's what you've got to remember--that's what it is.
So instead of going to the Render Queue,
I"m going to jump over the Media Encoder--
here's your first look at Adobe Media Encoder 5.5.
You can see that we now have these twist up little areas in here.
We've got watched folders, which--by the way, I'm not going to get into them but
watched folders can each have their own independent settings of how they're encoded.
You literally drop in a file and it will output it to a certain folder named,
based on what you want, to a certain codec.
In the queue here, we can add any of the media files that we have Drag and Drop
but instead of doing that, I'm going to choose File, Add After Effects Composition.
And I'm going to be using the composition that I currently have open,
which I named AE versions.
You'll notice that it's connecting to Dynamic Link Server
and it's showing me all of the different versions.
So the comp that I want is called Versions--I'll click OK and it loads inside.
Here, I'm going to output to a certain format,
I'm going to output to a certain location,
and by default--right now we have it turned off.
So in Media Encoder, you can tell it to start in 10 seconds
or two minutes or however you want.
Right now it's waiting for me to push the button up here and when I push Start Queue,
you'll see I get a beautiful big preview, lots of great feedback on what's encoding.
So here we are--we're encoding this version.
While this is encoding, you see how wicked fast it is on the Z800.
I'm going to come back into After Effects, turn on a different version,
File, Save, go back to Media Encoder, right Click, choose Duplicate,
and now it's going to use the last one saved on the disc, which is going to be Bob.
And there he is--he's coming in, number 2.
Once that's started, I'll come back to After Effects, turn that one off,
again--Save, back to Media Encoder, right Click, Duplicate;
and you'll see that one will start to encode.
Remember, these are pretty big files--wicked fast--there we go.
Turn that off, turn the last one on, File, Save, back to Media Encoder, Duplicate--
and now I've got my 4-versions output just like that.
Look at that--incredible!
Amazing, fast speed--Media Encoder is really, really intelligent.
It understands how to manage the memory.
The last thing I want to tell you that's important about Media Encoder is that
it will remember all these iterations--it keeps them sitting there.
So tomorrow, when someone says, "We need to output Version 1 or Version 2
in a different format."
No problem--I just duplicate it and then choose a different output preset
I don't even have to launch After Effects in the background
because what's happening is, when you see Dynamic Link Server load
inside Media Encoder, it's basically a version of After Effects that's in the background.
So tomorrow, just start up Media Encoder, hit Make Me A New Version,
and it will just spit it out; and if you happen to have the speed and power
of an HPZ800--well then, you're not going to have to wait around.
In fact, I had to get back to After Effects pretty quick because
the Renders were happening so fast.
So get out there, let's start using Media Encoder instead of that
Render Queue inside After Effects
and make sure you can send out all your versions.
[♪Music]
[Presenter/Music Colin Smith]
[Executive Producer Bob Donlon]
[Producer Karl Miller]
[Director J VFI Kush Amerasinghe]
[Post-Production/DP Erik Espera]
[ADOBE TV Productions]

