Thanks for the report, the issue has been fixed in the 2.3.1 release.
@Helly I don't see anything wrong with the Premiere export, the AVI headers seem to be fine. The only oddity is with the original, where the AVI hea...
Yeah, I can take a look. Any part/length is fine which exhibits the problematic behavior. Can you upload to google drive for example? Regarding the ...
Hi, Sorry for the very late reply. Could you figure out what the problem was in the meantime? I'd have to see a sample exhibiting the problem, wit...
Hi, I'm terribly sorry for the very late release, I just released 2.3.0, it really should have been released before the summer, but things got in th...
Exporting through After Effects should be done via Media Encoder, as there is no direct AE plugin, only a MediaCore one, which is used by Premiere and...
When you "Export" from Premiere at the top of the Export dialog in the "Format:" dropdown you should see "MagicYUV AVI" as an option.
There shouldn't be any difference whatsoever between MagicYUV YUV 4:2:0 and RGB if the input mp4 is YUV 4:2:0. If there is, then it indicates some pos...
Hi and welcome. If your input footage is mp4 it's likely 4:2:0 8-bit. To be sure, you can check the File -> File Information in virtualdub (look ...
Sorry for the delay, I got caught up in other things. Essentially 10-bit YUV 4:2:0 was basically done in a few days, with one minor detail left unfini...
Unfortunately it could be a problem with the AVI parser of the MagicYUV Adobe plugin. AVI files can be structured in a number of different ways. More ...
Yes, RGB for 2160p60 can be huge, the raw data is 3840*2160*3*60 bytes if using RGB24, ie. roughly 1,500 MB/s, which is 12 Gb/s, so yes, compressed at...
Hi, I presume you are importing the footage to Adobe through the MagicYUV Adobe MediaCore plugin and not through Adobe's VFW interface. At least if ...