![]() Idiots on YouTube will have you believe that it makes rendering faster, prevents crashes, cures cancer and sends your mother flowers on her birthday. This is easily the most misunderstood feature in Vegas. If there's a section of your footage that you particularly need to see in realtime, then you can use the Dynamic RAM Preview. Chances are you can find h.264 versions of it and downloading those may be quicker than re-encoding the ones you've got. You could also just convert your source footage to AVC/h.264 in Handbrake or find an original that's already in that format. ![]() ![]() You can also do it in utilities like Handbrake. You can do it in Vegas by just creating a new project and rendering your file as ProRes (there are other intermediates, but ProRes is the most common). The bad news is that you have to manually convert your files to ProRes. The most common type of intermediate file is ProRes. The main difference is that these are very high quality files (proxies tend to be lower quality) that take up large amounts of disk space. These are also files that it's very easy to edit with. The second option is also a professional workflow technique, though it is becoming more common in all areas of video. It doesn't delete them when you've finished, so you have to manually delete them later. sfvp0 in the same folder as the original file. The bad news is that it takes a while - let it do it while you have dinner or something. Right click a file in the Project Media window (the clips bin) and select Create Video Proxy. When you come to render the project, it uses the originals. When you edit the project, it's actually playing these proxy files instead of the originals. These are generated by the video editor and are designed to be easy to use. In high-end professional editing, you practically never work with original files. So what can you do? I'll paste what I wrote the other day: If you use phone footage, that often has a variable framerate, which will cause the preview to lag, because Vegas will have to generate extra frames to fill in the gaps. If you're using HEVC/h.265, it's more heavily compressed, so it takes extra time to decode that will cause things to lag. You generally ought to use MP4 files with AVC/h.264 footage inside them - oh and a constant frame rate. The main cause of preview lag is the source footage. I gave an answer the other day that covers this. Log in to your MAGIX account and download the latest builds here!.Not sure if your version of VEGAS is updated? Hate speech, racism, witch hunts, etc.No porn, hate posts, or anything of that nature is allowed.Hating on VEGAS and boasting about other video editing software.Posting deals when the software goes on sale.Asking questions about VEGAS Pro software.These actions will get you permanently banned. Our growing community is dedicated to helping out VEGAS Pro editors by answering questions and keeping you up to date with the latest information and downloads! We strive for a positive atmosphere and do not tolerate any form of bullying, harassment, or advocating of piracy. This is officially the BEST subreddit for VEGAS Pro!
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