![]() THE SOLUTION (which I found later) is to switch to another program, and then switch back to Premiere. For some projects, Premiere becomes nearly unusable, with hardly any keyboard or mouse input getting though. and sometimes even if the video is NOT playing. This is a very serious bug, where Premiere simply does not respond to some commands, while the video is playing. I programmed that explicitly for the purposes of Premiere tutorials, and "bug hunting," as I call it. You can see exactly which commands are not being recognized at any given moment, if you watch the live keystroke visualizer in the bottom right. Premiere 2017.1.2 BUG - Timeline is ignoring keyboard and mouse input - YouTube I made a video, which explains this bug far better than words alone: I reported this bug 2 weeks ago, but it's so severe, I am also posting on the forum for help. ![]() Maybe that's why they won't let you use it in their trial - it sucks! Now, come to find out, it was for nothing. The most annoying thing is I had to purchase PP to get access to the H.265 codec. H.264 and H.265 look practically identical, which also makes little sense. I thought "Ok, I'll export at 50mbps on H.264, then use HandBrake". It doesn't just seem to be a problem with H.265. I keep "Render at maximum depth" and "Render at maximum quality" checked or whatever. ![]() I've tried everything from playing with the levels/tiers/profiles, etc. I don't understand why in Premiere, I can export in H.265 50mbps and it looks WORSE than the HandBrake 16mbps. The 16mbps retained the detail I was looking for as well. ![]() The 50mbps file was ~95% of the original's quality. The settings I used are somewhat redundant, but I ended up with two tests: one was 50mbps (matching my original file) and the other ended up at about 16mbps (my final production target). Visually indistinguishable from the original video file(s). I thought maybe I was crazy - it's not possible to retain all of the image detail. The source footage is 50mbps 1080/60p from a Sony X3000. I've tried absolutely everything to export in H.265 and retain close to the originally video quality. ![]()
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