12/17/2023 0 Comments Adobe premiere pro undock panelI always act nicely, when the people are nice. But when you try to put yourself above others because you're so busy running whatever, then you can expect the same from others.Īs a new member of the forum, since September 2017, I can tell you - I never act superior. Simple "people, I'm so busy (but didn't we all?), I can't read the whole manual, can someone please tell me is there a way to move the scopes, to expand the timeline, etc." and everyone will nicely reply to such behavior. There is a difference between question and request. Isn't it? But you acted like I offended you, because I told you to inform yourself before requesting. As we both can see, that was your original request in the post just above my answer. I just behaved as Chales did and simply told you that scopes are floating windows (resizable also) and you can place it wherever you want. As a matter of fact I was just answered to Jim Simon and somehow you found yourself offended because of that.Īs you may not have noticed, in the first place I didn't act as a BMD forum gate keeper. But you found yourself offended because I didn't agree with you. I didn't push you back and I didn't try to cut down your request. That tells us (and the BMD team too) something about you. But it seems that you don't have the time to read (or learn), so you just created a new topic, despite the topics with the same requests already existing. If you read the forum you could see this was already asked for so many times. Yes it will be great to take all the best from competitors, but it takes time. In the past few years, they fulfilled so many requests from this forum, that Adobe didn't from their forum, for the entire life of Premiere. Most of us came from Premiere or FCP and we all have some habits that we bring from previous software, but we must adapt to the software we use now.įor the BMD team I have no words. I'm pretty sure, if we ask, Adobe can't wait to make Premiere more Resolve alike. Only thing that can be concluded from your post is that you want Premiere inside Resolve. Resolve has proven more than capable of handling the next 12 episodes that are in the pipe, but this one feature would give our editors and myself more flexibility to work how they want. This has exposed certain flaws in Premiere that does not indicate it's a viable choice going forward. Put your files in the Project panel, put your clips and edit them on a Timeline, and see the result on a Program monitor.Pete Berthet wrote:My studio is switching to resolve from Premiere to resolve after posting an 8x1 hour tv series. So now we’ve got a minimal, simple, clear workspace with three main blocks. In case you need something from these panels in the future, you’ll just go to the Window menu and immediately see all the panels that are opened and closed. So we’ll close them and open when necessary. Libraries, Info, History, Markers are useful, but not for now. Why here? Because you don’t need to see those two panels - Program monitor and Media browser - simultaneously. The Media browser is also very important, and it goes in the top right. Put the Effects panel near the Effects control panel. Drag the Project panel to the left because it’s an important one. To do so, let’s clear some space from the left of our timeline.ĭrag the Project panel and the Effects panel up. So we should give it as much space as we can. Timeline is the most important panel in Premiere Pro. (You can always find it here: Window → Workspaces.) Do the Right-click → Close panel. Now we’re going to delete this 'Workspaces' panel to free up so much valuable space on the top of your screen. And when you’re done, don’t forget to go to Window → Workspaces again and choose “Save changes to this workspace.” Before you start, go to Window → Workspaces → Save as New Workspace. We’ll just throw away everything we don’t need now in order to focus on important things and keep the most useful features handy and easy to access. Here is the way to rearrange it a little bit and customize it to make the work easy. Premiere Pro default interface was made to satisfy different requests of a wide audience - beginners as well as professionals - and it kind of misses the target. The principle is easy - we’re going to get rid of everything we don’t need (as a beginner user of Premiere Pro) in order to concentrate on things that really matter. Here are a couple of tips on how to quickly adjust all the panels in Premiere Pro so you can work fast and efficiently.
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