![]() ![]() In the main though CS6 has played very nicely with Mojave - in my experience at least. I'll qualify that by saying that my Premiere developed some corruption a few years ago, and I was unable to sort it (but it doesn't bother me as I've no need to use it any more), and many of the other programs I used very little. As we're only concerned with design for print at my work, we didn't have any of the other major programs installed.Īt home though, until very recently I had everything listed above installed, and all of them ran - mostly without issue - for years. That included Extensis Universal Type Client and its plugins for auto font activation & deactivation. So - other things being equal - the newer the OS that you run CS6 on beyond Mountain Lion, the more potential there is for issues.įor what it's worth though, we used to run Acrobat X Pro, InDesign CS6, Illustrator CS6 & Photoshop CS6 perfectly well on our 2018 Mac Minis (Intel) and 2017 iMacs (Intel) at work - all running Mojave - without any problems whatsoever. It all depends on which applications you need to run, but if you only ever need to run 64-bit ones, then - in theory - you could use an OS newer than Mojave.īear in mind though that CS6 hails from 2012, around the time of OS X 10.8 / Mountain Lion, and hasn't had any updates for years, let alone any official support from Adobe. So you're just going to have to take my word for it! ![]() I can't give a reference or link to where I found this information, simply because I worked it out for myself, running each & every component (on Mojave) and checking Activity Monitor. Around half of the CS6 "Master Collection" components are 32-bit, and around half are 64-bit. So as long as you stick with Mojave or earlier, your 32-bit software should run fine, CS6 included.įYI the individual components of CS6 aren't all 32-bit. I also run Mojave on my Mac at home.Īlthough 5 of the work Macs now run Adobe CC as opposed to CS6, almost all of them originally ran CS6, and a couple of the older Macs still do.īoth High Sierra & Mojave can & do run 32-bit software. I'll be upgrading those that are able to, to Monterey in the New Year, as part of a department-wide upgrade plan (which involves all sorts of software & some new servers). I oversee 10 or so Macs at work which mostly run Mojave but a few still run High Sierra as they're too old to go beyond it. To the OP - whether you're looking to run CS6 on Mojave - as per your thread title - or on High Sierra - as you mention in your initial post - then, assuming that the Mac in question can happily run one of those OSs natively, there's absolutely no need to run any virtual machines. Support for HDR in HEVC (H.I rarely chime in on forum threads since they can sometimes descend into petty bickering, and they're often filled with poor calibre comments which can be infuriating to read, but this is a topic I have some expertise in. Export support for ambisonic audio (H.264 only) Streamlined bit depth and alpha channel settings (QuickTime only) Option to maintain playback in Premiere Pro while rendering in Media Encoder Automatically relinked assets when importing a sequence Support for Color Profiles from After Effects sources Destination Publishing to Adobe Stock Contributor Timecode modification for 720p 59.94 media Warning when importing non-native QuickTime sources Format support for RF64 WAV Decode/Encode, decode for Sony X-OCN, and QuickTime DNx Smart Rendering ![]() Animated GIF export on macOS and Windows H.264 adaptive bitrate presets automatically choose best output bitrate based on source frame size and frame rate Notification for missing items in queue before encoding Add custom video thumbnails when publishing to YouTube Add custom titles when publishing to YouTube, Facebook, or Vimeo Page selection when publishing to Facebook Playlist selection when publishing to YouTube Channel selection when publishing to YouTube and Vimeo Destination Publishing support for new Twitter 280-character limit RED camera Image Processing Pipeline PP2 support Support for importing Sony Venice camera formats Support for importing Canon C200 camera formats Hardware-accelerated H.264 and HEVC encoding on Mac OS 10.13 systems with supported hardware Hardware-accelerated H.264 encoding on Windows 10 with 6th Generation (or later) Intel. Improved Sony RAW/X-OCN camera format decoding Hardware-accelerated HEVC encoding on Windows 10 with 7th Generation (or later) Intel. Export XAVC QFHD Long GOP 4:2:2 formats Tight integration with Adobe Premiere Pro CC, After Effects CC, and other applications provides a seamless workflow. This powerful media management tool allows you to work with media in a unified way across applications. Ingest, transcode, create proxies, and output any format you can imagine. Free Download Adobe Media Encoder 2024 v24.0.0.54 (圆4) Multilingual Free Download | 852.7 Mb ![]()
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