This table shows the Adobe Photoshop version history and operating system compatibility in charts, starting with the first versions by independent creators and brothers Thomas and John Knoll in the summer of 1988. The license to distribute the program was purchased by Adobe Systems in September 1988. External links The Interesting History of Adobe Photoshop at 1st Web Designer (2016-01-17.
Developer(s) | Adobe Systems SuperMac Technology |
---|---|
Initial release | December 1991; 29 years ago |
Operating system | Classic Mac OS Microsoft Windows |
Type | Video editing software |
- Maxim Jago, author of Adobe Premiere Pro CC Learn by Video (2014 release), shares simple tips you can use on countless Premiere Pro projects, including some hidden gems and helpful timesavers. Enjoy Premiere Pro CC, which is a powerful and flexible editing system with a huge range of features, with more added all the time.
- Genuine Adobe emails are always @adobe.com. Adobe Staff will never ask you to share your passwords or sensitive information in the Adobe Community. Adobe employees will always direct you to communicate through an official Adobe channel to set up support sessions. Report abuse or suspicious behavior to: phishing@adobe.com.
- The only way you'd get a free 5.5 upgrade is if you purchased CS5 between today and CS5.5's release. Any customer who has purchased CS5 from March 11th to now is entitled to a free upgrade. If you purchased from Adobe.com, you will be emailed directly.
- Release Notes Premiere Pro CS5. Adobe Premiere Pro User Guide Select. Navigate to the Adobe CS5 folder found at the root level on the DVD and double-click Set-up.exe to start the installation process. If you downloaded the software from the web, the installer will self-extract and launch automatically. Please register to get up.
Adobe Premiere was a former video editing software developed by Adobe Systems. It was first launched in 1991, and its final version was released in 2002. It was replaced by Adobe Premiere Pro (introduced in 2003), a rewritten version of Adobe Premiere.
History[edit]
Introduced in December 1991, Premiere was one of the first computernon-linear editing systems.[1] The first version for Mac released in 1991, and the first version for Microsoft Windows was released in September 1993.[2] The project began at SuperMac Technology as ReelTime, a QuickTime-based video editor for its VideoSpigot video capture card.[3] SuperMac engineer Randy Ubillos created a working demo of ReelTime in about 10 weeks while QuickTime was still in beta.[4] The software project was acquired by Adobe Systems in August 1991 and was renamed Adobe Premiere.[3] Ubillos also left SuperMac to join Adobe.[4]
Features[edit]
Premiere was one of the first QuickTime-based video editors on the market.[5] As a result, its ability to import new video formats could also be upgraded by updating to a newer compatible version of Quicktime. However, it was limited to processing video and images that were 1024 pixels wide, or less.[6]
Acrobat pro windows 8 1. Premiere included 24 transition effects and a plug-in architecture that was compatible with some Photoshop filters.[5]
Release history[edit]
Version | Platform | Release date | Significant changes | Codename |
---|---|---|---|---|
Adobe Premiere 1.0 | Mac | December 1991[7] |
| Demon |
Adobe Premiere 2.0 | Mac | September 1992[9] |
| |
Adobe Premiere 3.0 | Mac | August 1993[11] |
| |
Adobe Premiere 1.0 | Windows | September 1993[12] |
| |
Adobe Premiere 1.1 | Windows | February 1994[16] |
| |
Adobe Premiere 4.0 | Mac | July 1994[18] |
| Zambini |
Adobe Premiere 4.0 | Windows | December 1994[21] |
| |
Adobe Premiere 4.2 | Mac | October 1995[23] |
| TopGun |
Adobe Premiere 4.2 | Windows | April 1996[24] |
| |
Adobe Premiere 4.2 for Silicon Graphics | UNIX/SGI | July 1997[26] |
| Primo |
Adobe Premiere 5.0 | Windows and Mac | May 1998[28] |
| Mustang |
Adobe Premiere 5.1 | Windows and Mac | October 1998[30] |
| |
Adobe Premiere 6.0 | Windows and Mac | January 2001[31] |
| Jukebox |
Adobe Premiere 6.5 | Windows and Mac | August 2002 |
| Rockford |
Developer(s) | Adobe Systems SuperMac Technology |
---|---|
Initial release | December 1991; 29 years ago |
Operating system | Classic Mac OS Microsoft Windows |
Type | Video editing software |
- Maxim Jago, author of Adobe Premiere Pro CC Learn by Video (2014 release), shares simple tips you can use on countless Premiere Pro projects, including some hidden gems and helpful timesavers. Enjoy Premiere Pro CC, which is a powerful and flexible editing system with a huge range of features, with more added all the time.
- Genuine Adobe emails are always @adobe.com. Adobe Staff will never ask you to share your passwords or sensitive information in the Adobe Community. Adobe employees will always direct you to communicate through an official Adobe channel to set up support sessions. Report abuse or suspicious behavior to: phishing@adobe.com.
- The only way you'd get a free 5.5 upgrade is if you purchased CS5 between today and CS5.5's release. Any customer who has purchased CS5 from March 11th to now is entitled to a free upgrade. If you purchased from Adobe.com, you will be emailed directly.
- Release Notes Premiere Pro CS5. Adobe Premiere Pro User Guide Select. Navigate to the Adobe CS5 folder found at the root level on the DVD and double-click Set-up.exe to start the installation process. If you downloaded the software from the web, the installer will self-extract and launch automatically. Please register to get up.
Adobe Premiere was a former video editing software developed by Adobe Systems. It was first launched in 1991, and its final version was released in 2002. It was replaced by Adobe Premiere Pro (introduced in 2003), a rewritten version of Adobe Premiere.
History[edit]
Introduced in December 1991, Premiere was one of the first computernon-linear editing systems.[1] The first version for Mac released in 1991, and the first version for Microsoft Windows was released in September 1993.[2] The project began at SuperMac Technology as ReelTime, a QuickTime-based video editor for its VideoSpigot video capture card.[3] SuperMac engineer Randy Ubillos created a working demo of ReelTime in about 10 weeks while QuickTime was still in beta.[4] The software project was acquired by Adobe Systems in August 1991 and was renamed Adobe Premiere.[3] Ubillos also left SuperMac to join Adobe.[4]
Features[edit]
Premiere was one of the first QuickTime-based video editors on the market.[5] As a result, its ability to import new video formats could also be upgraded by updating to a newer compatible version of Quicktime. However, it was limited to processing video and images that were 1024 pixels wide, or less.[6]
Acrobat pro windows 8 1. Premiere included 24 transition effects and a plug-in architecture that was compatible with some Photoshop filters.[5]
Release history[edit]
Version | Platform | Release date | Significant changes | Codename |
---|---|---|---|---|
Adobe Premiere 1.0 | Mac | December 1991[7] |
| Demon |
Adobe Premiere 2.0 | Mac | September 1992[9] |
| |
Adobe Premiere 3.0 | Mac | August 1993[11] |
| |
Adobe Premiere 1.0 | Windows | September 1993[12] |
| |
Adobe Premiere 1.1 | Windows | February 1994[16] |
| |
Adobe Premiere 4.0 | Mac | July 1994[18] |
| Zambini |
Adobe Premiere 4.0 | Windows | December 1994[21] |
| |
Adobe Premiere 4.2 | Mac | October 1995[23] |
| TopGun |
Adobe Premiere 4.2 | Windows | April 1996[24] |
| |
Adobe Premiere 4.2 for Silicon Graphics | UNIX/SGI | July 1997[26] |
| Primo |
Adobe Premiere 5.0 | Windows and Mac | May 1998[28] |
| Mustang |
Adobe Premiere 5.1 | Windows and Mac | October 1998[30] |
| |
Adobe Premiere 6.0 | Windows and Mac | January 2001[31] |
| Jukebox |
Adobe Premiere 6.5 | Windows and Mac | August 2002 |
| Rockford |
Adobe Cs5 Premiere Pro
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^'Adobe Premiere 1.0 (Mac)'. WinWorld. Retrieved 2020-12-29.
- ^'An Oral History of Adobe Premiere Software Evolution: The First 25 Years'. Creative Planet Network. 2017-05-05. Retrieved 2020-12-29.
- ^ abSuperMac War Story 10: The Video Spigot by Steve Blank. 2009-05-11.
- ^ abBack to 1.0: Interview with Adobe Premiere, Final Cut Pro and iMovie developer Randy Ubillos by Alex Gollner, Alex4D. 2015-08-26.
- ^ abVideoSpigot Review by Jon Pugh, TidBITS. 1992-04-20.
- ^Video Editing on Adobe Premiere 1.0 (from 1991) – Krazy Ken's Tech Misadventures by Computer Clan, YouTube. 2018-11-15.
- ^ abSullivan, Eamonn (January 27, 1992). 'Adobe multimedia tool makes nimble partner for QuickTime'. PC Week. Vol. 9 no. 4. p. 34.
- ^Thompson, Tom (June 1992). 'Two tools of the QuickTime trade'. Byte. Vol. 17 no. 6. p. 336.
- ^ abChadbourne, Teri (September 18, 1992). 'Adobe Premiere Version 2.0 Now Available' (Press release). New York: Business Wire.
- ^Green, Doug; Green, Denise (November 16, 1992). 'Premiere holds its place as the best multimedia editor'. InfoWorld. Vol. 14 no. 46. pp. 142(2).
- ^ abPane, Patricia J. (August 2, 1993). 'Adobe Premiere 3.0 for the Macintosh now available' (Press release). New York: Business Wire.
- ^Peck, LaVon (September 10, 1993). 'Adobe Premiere 1.0 for Windows now available' (Press release). New York: Business Wire.
- ^Rosenbaum, Daniel J. (January 1994). 'Premiere 1.0 for Windows: digital video production on the PC'. Computer Shopper[specify]. Vol. 14 no. 1. pp. 869(2).
- ^Safi, Quabidur R. (October 11, 1993). 'Premiere 1.0 for Windows'. PC Week. Vol. 10 no. 40. pp. 92(1).
- ^Taft, Darryl K.; Georgianis, Maria V. (August 16, 1993). 'Adobe builds presence across multiple platforms'. Computer Reseller News. No. 540. pp. 16(1).
- ^ abSchaefer, Sonya (February 7, 1994). 'Adobe Systems ships Adobe Premiere 1.1 for Windows' (Press release). New York: Business Wire.
- ^Simone, Louisa[clarification needed] (April 26, 1994). 'Adobe Premiere'. PC Magazine. Vol. 13 no. 8. pp. 233(2).
- ^ abPane, Patricia J. (July 25, 1994). 'Version 4.0 of Adobe Premiere for the Macintosh now available' (Press release). New York: Business Wire.
- ^Fischer, Andy (April 1995). 'Adobe Premiere version 4.0'. Computer Life. Vol. 2 no. 4. pp. 118(1).
- ^Brakey, Rob; Jordan, Lawrence (December 1994). 'Adobe Premiere 4.0'. Macworld. Vol. 11 no. 12. San Francisco. pp. 54(2). Archived from the original on 2009-07-15. Retrieved April 13, 2017.
- ^Pane, Patricia J. (December 21, 1994). 'Adobe Premiere Version 4.0 for Windows now available' (Press release). New York: Business Wire.
- ^Simone, Luisa[clarification needed] (March 14, 1995). 'Adobe Premiere 4.0: video the professional way'. PC Magazine. Vol. 14 no. 5. p. 50.
- ^ ab'Adobe Premiere 4.2 for Macintosh and Power Macintosh Now Available'(PDF) (Press release). Adobe Systems Incorporated. October 20, 1995. Archived from the original(PDF) on January 13, 1997. Retrieved July 6, 2007.
- ^'Adobe Premiere 4.2 for Windows 95 & Windows NT Now Available'(PDF) (Press release). Adobe Systems Incorporated. April 24, 1996. Archived from the original(PDF) on January 13, 1997. Retrieved July 6, 2007.
- ^'Adobe® Premiere New Feature Highlights'(PDF) (Press release). Adobe Systems Incorporated. February 27, 1996. Archived from the original(PDF) on December 19, 1996. Retrieved July 6, 2007.
- ^'Adobe ships Premiere 4.2 for SGI O2 workstations'. What's New at Adobe – July, 1997. Adobe Systems Incorporated. July 21, 1997. Archived from the original on February 4, 1998. Retrieved July 6, 2007.
- ^'Adobe Systems to Deliver Silicon Graphics Version Of Adobe Premiere Non-linear Editing Software'(PDF) (Press release). Adobe Systems Incorporated. October 7, 1996. Archived from the original(PDF) on January 13, 1997. Retrieved July 6, 2007.
- ^ ab'Adobe Premiere 5.0 Now Shipping' (Press release). Adobe Systems Incorporated. May 18, 1998. Archived from the original on July 3, 1998. Retrieved July 6, 2007.
- ^'Adobe Premiere 5.0 New Features'. Adobe Systems Incorporated. Archived from the original on July 3, 1998. Retrieved July 6, 2007.
- ^ ab'Adobe Announces Update to Premiere 5.0' (Press release). Adobe Systems Incorporated. October 14, 1998. Archived from the original on February 18, 1999. Retrieved July 6, 2007.
- ^'Adobe Ships Premiere 6.0' (Press release). Adobe Systems Incorporated. January 8, 2001. Archived from the original on April 5, 2001. Retrieved July 6, 2007.
External links[edit]
- Premiere for Windows downloadable files at Adobe (archived 1996-11-21)