Adobe Beyond Adobe
Find out what the movers and shakers in Adobe's Dynamic Media Organization are thinking about, and get a glimpse into their vision on everything from product direction to hot trends in the worlds of video production and content creation.
The Adobe Posters:
Bill Roberts: Director, Product Management
Colin Smith: Sr. Solutions Engineer – DMO
Michael Coleman: Sr. Product Manager, Video Editing Workflows
Ginna Baldassarre: Sr. Product Manager, Production Premium
Dave Helmly: Sr. Business Development Manager
Dennis Radeke: Business Development Manager
Kevin Towes: Product Mgr Flash Media Server
Karl Soule: Sr. Solutions Engineer – DMO
Jason Levine: Sr. Evangelist
Kevin Monahan Online Technical Evangelist
Steve Forde Sr. Product Manager, After Effects
Ginna Baldassarre Sr. Product Manager, Adobe Premiere Pro
Michelle Gallina Sr. Product Marketing Manager, Production Premium
Ellen Wixted Sr. Product Manager, Production Premium
Colin Stefani Senior Program Manager, Audio
Todd Kopriva Online Technical Evangelist
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Tuesday, December 13, 2011
Dennis Radeke | 12/13- 09:28 AM
With the advent of version 5.52 of Premiere Pro, Adobe offered support for what NVIDIA calls Maximus on the PC platform. Maximus in essence is a Quadro card combined with a Tesla card. Okay, what’s a Tesla card? Basically, it’s a Quadro card without the display outputs – essentially, a headless GPU processing powerhouse.
I wanted to take what I had done with the NVIDIA Quadro card comparison and apply the same tests to the Maximus card set I have. Read on, to learn the results.
My previous blog entry is here – give it a read if you haven’t gone through it yet. To review, I have a HP Z800 that is a couple of years old but still pretty solid all the way around. For my Maximus test, I took the comparatively lowly Quadro 2000 and matched it up with the Tesla C2075.
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