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  • - Hey it's Justin Brown here, from PRIMALVIDEO.

  • So there's still a lot of hype

  • around the new 2016 MacBook Pro.

  • There's a heap of videos comparing it

  • to the older 2015 model.

  • We considered doing a video that was specific

  • to video editing comparing the two,

  • but there's already quite a few great options

  • on YouTube as well.

  • So instead we thought we'd compare the 2016 MacBook Pro

  • to what a lot of people consider the Windows' equivalent,

  • which is the Dell XPS 15" 2016 model.

  • So in this video we're gonna compare the two

  • for video editing,

  • but we're also gonna throw in the 2015 MacBook Pro as well.

  • So this video's gonna be entirely focused

  • around real world editing.

  • We're not gonna look at benchmark scores at all,

  • if you're interested in benchmark scores,

  • there's a heap of other videos

  • that will cover the benchmark scores of the three laptops.

  • We're gonna try to keep this as close to, apples and apples,

  • or Apples to Dells, as possible.

  • So we'll be comparing rendering and exporting time

  • in Adobe Premiere across the board, but we'll also throw

  • some Final Cut comparisons in there as well.

  • (techno rock music)

  • So we'll start out with the specs of the three systems.

  • The Dell XPS 15" is the 2016 model.

  • Which has an INTEL Core I7 2.6 Gigahertz Quad Core Processor

  • 16 Gig of DDR4 RAM

  • and a 2 Gigabyte NVIDIA GTX 960M video card.

  • And the 2016 MacBook Pro 15"

  • has an INTEL Core I7 2.7 Gigahertz Quad Core Processor

  • 16 Gig of RAM and a two Gigabyte RADEON PRO 460 video card.

  • The 2015 MacBook Pro is the 15" model

  • with an INTEL Core I7 2.5 Gigahertz Quad Core Processor

  • 16 Gig of RAM and a 2 Gigabyte RADEON R9M 370X video card.

  • So before we started any testing,

  • we did make sure that the GP rendering was enabled,

  • or that your Mercury Playback Engine was set to GPU

  • across all of the systems, so there was Open CL on the Macs,

  • which was actually enabled by default

  • once Adobe Premier had been installed.

  • On the Windows system which was enabling the NVIDIA CUDA,

  • we actually went through three different sets

  • of NVIDIA drivers before we could enable it.

  • So once that was sorted

  • we copied the exact same project files and all the footage

  • to the Desktop of each of the three systems.

  • So what this project contained is a six minute edit

  • and a two minute edit of a 1080P mixed frame rate,

  • mixed format, mixed bitrate edit.

  • Which is something that is pretty common

  • when you're editing these days.

  • So the first test we did

  • was exporting the two minute version of this project

  • across the three laptops.

  • The settings we used to export

  • were the YouTube 1080P preset

  • built-in to the latest 2017 Adobe Premiere Pro.

  • (techno rock music)

  • (timer dings)

  • (timer dings)

  • (timer dings)

  • And the Dell XPS 2016 was the clear winner

  • coming in at two minutes 14 seconds.

  • Followed by the 2016 MacBook Pro at two minutes 55,

  • and then the 2015 MacBook Pro at three minutes 42.

  • So we ran the same test again

  • but using the six minute version of that edit.

  • And once again, the Dell XPS 2016 came out on top

  • with an export time of six minutes 45 seconds,

  • followed by the MacBook Pro 2016

  • with eight minutes 58 seconds,

  • followed by 12 minutes 30 seconds on the 2015 MacBook Pro.

  • So while there wasn't a huge difference

  • exporting the two minute file across the three,

  • you can see that exporting a larger file,

  • exporting the six minute version,

  • has started to make a big difference.

  • And if the difference between them is this much

  • at a six minute export,

  • then it's gonna be huge for a much larger project.

  • So for the next test

  • and to really put these systems under load,

  • we decided to do a 4K test

  • and still with Adobe Premiere across the board.

  • So we created a new 4K project

  • and we imported four video files that were all shot in 4K.

  • We scaled these four clips down

  • and positioned them all within the 4K frame,

  • and we repeated all the clips

  • so they would all play continuously to the two minute mark.

  • And then to take this up a notch further,

  • we reversed two of the video clips

  • across the entire length of the two minute clip.

  • So really what we are exporting here

  • is one 4K file that's made up of four 4K individual files

  • all on the screen at once,

  • where two of them have been reversed

  • for the entire two minute clip.

  • The settings we used to export across the board

  • were the YouTube 4K preset built-in

  • to the latest 2017 Adobe Premiere Pro.

  • The Dell XPS 15" 2016 took 18 minutes and 51 seconds

  • to export the timeline.

  • The 2016 MacBook Pro took 58 minutes and 42 seconds,

  • whereas the 2015 MacBook Pro took one hour and 20 minutes.

  • So that's a massive difference between the three.

  • So what we thought we'd do next

  • is bring Final Cut into the mix, Final Cut 10.

  • So what we did is we recreated that 4K timeline,

  • that two minute timeline that had four 4K video files

  • all on the screen on a 4K project,

  • where two of them had been reversed

  • for the entire two minute clip.

  • We also turned off background rendering in Final Cut 10

  • so that there was no caching or no pre-rendering done

  • before we went to export.

  • Then we ran two separate exports of this timeline.

  • The first was just using the Share to YouTube preset,

  • set to 4K, which you're probably thinking

  • "Yep that's gonna be different

  • "between that and Adobe Premiere."

  • So we also sent out via Compressor

  • and we keyed in the exact same settings,

  • the same bitrate, the same resolution,

  • everything exactly the same in Adobe Premiere.

  • We made that same preset in Compressor.

  • And here are the results.

  • The 2015 MacBook Pro did the export from Final Cut

  • in four minutes 55 seconds,

  • and via Compressor in 6 minutes 20.

  • And the 2016 MacBook Pro did the export from Final Cut

  • in three minutes 27 and five minutes 13 through Compressor.

  • So comparing those export times,

  • and again with background rendering turned off,

  • Final Cut vs Adobe Premiere, there is a massive difference

  • in export time between the two.

  • So these results are pretty interesting

  • as definitely, definitely not what I expected.

  • I can't believe that there's such a huge difference

  • in exporting from Final Cut,

  • or even exporting from Final Cut via Compressor,

  • vs exporting what is essentially the same timeline

  • in Adobe Premiere, even on the same systems.

  • Now I'm someone who uses both of these editing programs

  • pretty much every week.

  • All of my corporate and client work

  • is done in Adobe Premiere

  • and all the videos on this channel are done in Final Cut.

  • So it's pretty interesting to compare what is essentially

  • the same timeline being exported between the two

  • using the exact same systems

  • So in regards to the performance

  • or the smoothness of editing,

  • in that 4K project,

  • across Adobe Premiere and Final Cut,

  • across all three systems the Adobe Premiere project

  • wasn't able to be played even at 1/8th quality.

  • In Final Cut we were able to playback

  • that 4K timeline smoothly,

  • it definitely had quality loss,

  • we did have to set Performance as the setting

  • instead of Quality,

  • so I'm not sure how much of the quality hit,

  • it didn't look great,

  • but it was definitely editable

  • and enough that you could color grade

  • and work with the footage.

  • So I really didn't expect

  • that there would be such a huge difference in export time,

  • for exporting what's essentially the same timeline

  • in Final Cut and in Adobe Premiere.

  • It's clear to say

  • that if you're going to be using Adobe Premiere

  • then you should look at the Dell XPS 15"

  • over the MacBook Pro.

  • If you're already a Mac user

  • and you wanna save a heap of time on your exports,

  • then maybe Final Cut could be the answer for you.

  • Now if you're looking for a great comparison

  • with full benchmarks and everything specifically

  • between the 2016 MacBook Pro and the 2015 MacBook Pro,

  • then check out the video that's linked on-screen now.

  • I'll see you soon.

- Hey it's Justin Brown here, from PRIMALVIDEO.

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