![]() Once you’ve updated the drivers, you can safely turn GPU acceleration on again. On a Mac, go to Apple menu->About this Mac->Software Update. If you’re on Windows using an Nvidia card, you want the Studio drivers, not the Game Ready drivers. You’ll find hardware acceleration toggles in the Media settings.Īgain, updating the GPU driver or the OS is your next step. Turning this off in Preferences->Media will let you know if this was the cause of your playback glitches or export results. Premiere Pro also has GPU acceleration for decoding and encoding some formats-most notably h.264 and h.265. Read more about why in the article on The Ultimate Guide to Premiere Pro’s Render Quality and Bit Depth Settings. To make sure everything still looks the same while GPU acceleration is turned off, remember to set your Sequence Settings to Max Render Quality and Maximum Bit Depth. You should update your GPU drivers-or the whole OS if you’re on macOS. If the problem goes away, that narrows it down considerably. Try turning off GPU Rendering: File->Project Settings->General->Video Rendering and Playback and set Renderer to Software Only. If you’re experiencing glitches during playback, weird colors, strange overlays etc., there’s a chance your GPU driver is outdated. ![]() If your system drive is the only fast drive, buy an extra fast drive for Media Cache when you have a chance, and attach it with a fast connection. In After Effects, go to Preferences->Media
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