

What else is in the July update?Īlongside Premiere Pro and speech to text, Adobe is bringing some features available to test as betas, namely multi-frame rendering in After Effects and Body Tracker and Puppet Maker features in Character Animator.Įssentially After Effects is gaining more speed by taking advantage of multi-core processors found in the majority of computers, resulting in faster exporting and previews to make sure that the project is looking just right. It’s currently available in 13 different languages and can be updated right now for anyone with an M1 Mac. Adobe has said that the app is 80% faster than before, alongside M1 support for Media Encoder and Character Animator, so users can already get started on a video project on their M1 Mac.Īlongside the tentpole of Premiere Pro now becoming M1 compatible, Adobe has also been showcasing a new speech to text feature in the July update, where users can easily add captions to their videos at no extra cost for Creative Cloud subscribers.Īdobe is stating that this is five times faster than other apps that have this similar feature, easily saving time for content creators.

Premiere Pro is a popular app for content creators, and with more Macs arriving with the Apple Silicon chip, alongside rumors of more models on the way, many users have been waiting for the app to become native on these chips. With this new July update, there’s also a new speech to text feature, alongside other helpful updates that look to improve many workflows in the coming months.

In the last few months, Lightroom Classic, Illustrator, InDesign, and Adobe Audition are now all M1 compatible, which works on Apple’s Silicon chips rather than Intel’s, and has significant performance gains across the Creative Cloud suite for Macs powered by the M1 chip.īut Premiere Pro is seen by many as the go-to app for editing video, so to see it on Apple’s new chips is a big deal, especially as we head towards a new school year very soon.

Another month brings another Adobe app now fully compatible with Apple’s M1 Macs, with Premiere Pro now updated to work on the new machines.
