

If you have not used avisynth before, try now and you will soon wonder how you managed without it for so long. You take this file and create an *.avs file (which is nothing but a text file created with notepad, consisting of probably less than 5 lines, that points to the *.avi file debugmode exported), then submit or input this file to the x264 GUI, and voila! The quality of your encodes will now be dictated mainly by the parameters you set with x264, as well as additional arguments that you include with the *.avs script (that can needlessly be complicated & produce worse-looking results when implemented with Premiere, like cropping and resizing). Exporting via debugmode will create a small signpost *.avi file, and is done in a few seconds.
ADOBE PREMIERE PRO CC 2014 CODECS INSTALL
To be more explicit, after you successfully install debugmode, it will be listed as an export option. This is, to install debugmode frameserver, avisynth, and x264 (with an appropriate GUI, like simple x264 launcher).


How about Vegas Pro? Do you know if it works with x264 in a better way? Correct me but my impression is you seem to be sidestepping one of the really only valid approach to this, which is one of the alternatives _Al_ has posted above. Now I feel like that Premiere is not the right program for my applications. Writing library : x264 core 125 r2209 68dfb7b Below you can find the detailed information about the codec/format that Prism uses. It seems that it is using AVC, but I have no idea on how I can install/use AVC codec in Premiere. I tried MediaInfo to see what codec Prism is exactly using. As you can see in the above videos, the Premiere one is larger and more noisy (pixels are distorted especially when the camera is moving and you can see noises that cause pixels to seem jumpy/jaggy - sorry I don't know the exact name of this kind of noise). What I'd like to find is the right format in Premiere to get pretty similar quality&size as I get with Prism. I have uploaded the original captured video as well as samples of the videos compressed by Prism and Premiere on my dropbox: The exported files are always larger and lower in quality. I have been trying to export a video to the same level of compression with kind of similar quality with Premiere, but I haven't yet been successful. It uses AVI container with H.264 codec and compresses a lot while you don't feel much in quality loss. I have been doing this for long long time using NCH Prism Video Converter and It does a good job. The first thing I tried to achieve with Premiere is to convert/compress videos that I capture by my camera. I am a beginner with Adobe Premiere so please excuse me if this is a naive question and terminology.
