Not to mention, Google, which followed Apple’s footsteps and introduced support for HEIF on Android with Android P. Monitor: Dell 22"/56cm, 1680x1050, 35 pixels/cmIf you have an iPhone running iOS 11 (or later) or a Mac running macOS High Sierra (or later), chances are that, at some point in time, you might have come across the HEIF (or HEIC) and HEVC formats on your device. Hard drives: C Drive 256gb SSD, various other HDDs. GPU: ATI Radeon HD 4770 (512mb) which is ignored by MEP RAM: 64gb (2x32gb sticks) G.Skill "Ripjaws" DDR4 3200Mhz Power supply: 850W Cooler Master (should have got modular)ĬPU: Intel i7 13700K running at 3400mhz, cooled by a Kraken 2x140mm All In One liquid cooler. Windows 11 v22H2 severely modified by Openshell and ExplorerPatcher I'm keeping my old system as a capture station for analogue video tapes and DV. My new system 1 does the same job at 160% of film speed. A video, with Neat Video noise reduction applied, would encode at 12% of film speed. I was really suffering, not so much in editing (with proxies) but in encoding, which just took ages. Since then we've advanced to MP4 and to bigger and bigger resolutions. My struggle is over! I built my (now) system 2 in 2011 when DV was king and MPEG 2 was just coming onto the scene and I needed a more powerful system to cope. Mediainfo gives the framerate as Variable "mode" ( I notice it shows overall framerate as 29.97):Ĭomplete name : D:\Alwyn\Alwyn Graphics\Digital Pictures Photosync\Daughter's iPhone\Recents\20200520_134832.MOVĬom. : T13:48:32+0800įormat/Info : High Efficiency Video CodingĬodec ID/Info : High Efficiency Video Codingįormat/Info : Advanced Audio Codec Low ComplexityĪll my forum comments are based on or refer to my System 1. I activated it, then imported the video no worries. MEP put up the message about buying the HEVC codec, which I did (US$5). I just tried to import a video from my daughter's new iphone 11. "The condition of any backup is unknown until a restore is attempted."
Rogers LS7 speakers run from Cambridge Audio P50 amplifier Ram Acoustic Studio speakers amplified by NAD amplifier. Tuned to room with Tannoy audio application. CS6, NX Studio, Mixcraft 9 Pro.Īudio System 5 x matched bi-wired 150 watt Tannoy Reveal speakers plus one Tannoy 15" 250 watt sub with 5.1 class A amplifier. VXP 14, MEP 2022, Vegas Studio 16, Vegas Pro 18, Cubase 4. M Audio Axiom AIR Mini MIDI keyboard Ver 5. Two Samsung 27" LED SA350 monitors with 5000000:1 contrast ratios at 60Hz. Memory interface 192bit Memory bandwidth 360.o5GB/s 12GB of dedicated GDDR6 video memory, shared system memory 16307MB PCi Express x8 Gen3. Total 16TB of five external WD drives for backup.ĪSUS NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 12GB. 1x500GB SSD current project only drive, 1x WD RED 2TB drive for latest footage storage. + x2 WD BLACK 2TB internal SATA 7,200rpm hard drives.1 for internal projects, 1 for Library clips/sounds/music/stills./backup of working projects. Driver version 31.0.101.2127 with 64GB of 3200MHz Corsair DDR4 ram.ġ x 250GB Evo 970 NVMe: drive for C: drive backup 1 x 1TB Sabrent NVMe drive for Operating System / Programs only. Intel i9900K Coffee Lake 3.6 to 5.1GHz CPU with Intel UHD 630 Graphics.
Direct X 12.1 latest hardware updates for Western Digital hard drives.Īsus ROG STRIX Z390-F Gaming motherboard Rev 1.xx with Supreme FX inboard audio using the S1220A code. This could be a deliberate holding back from the phone manufacturers. Unfortunately the decoders don't seem to have made their way across to other editing software yet.
Variable frame rate recordings are still relatively new and designed to save memory space on your phone. Then that file can be used in your video editor.
To convert variable frame rate files to constant frame rates you will need another program. If you don't understand the results from MediaInfo then post them here for us to look at. Use the 'Tree View' and it will give all the details. To find out if the file is variable frame rate of not, download the free MediaInfo program (Link in blue) and see what the file readout says. For any other files you may have already, you made need to convert them first to constant a frame rate before most editors can handle them. On iPhones this can be switched off I think on the phone. The problem is if you are recording HEVC with a variable frame rate.