![]() ![]() The latest versions and 30-day trials are available for download now at System requirements are either Windows 10, 8, 7, Vista or XP (32-bit and 64-bit) and a VST 2/3 host or Pro Tools, or macOS 10.10 or higher (64-bit only) with Intel or Apple Silicon processor, and an Audio Units host, VST 2/3 host, or Pro Tools. The updated plug-ins are fully compatible with previous versions. "Porting that to the Apple Silicon Mac was a relatively easy and quick process, but, of course, we took the time to further fine-tune our code to tailor it to the new M1 processors."Īs well as giving early adopters of the M1 MacBooks and Mac mini their first taste of a bright third-party plugin future on Apple Silicon, the updates also fix a number of bugs, as well as adding support for Dolby Atmos 7.0.2 and 7.1.2 in the VST3 version of Pro-L 2 and Pro-Q 3, and optimizing various distortion styles in Saturn 2. "We’ve been making plugins for iOS for years, so we were already familiar with ARM processors and have done a lot of ARM-specific optimization work over time," says FabFilter co-founder Frederik Slijkerman. ![]() And drawing on their extensive experience of porting to iPad, the company didn’t stop there, going on to optimize CPU usage across their product line specifically for M1. Every effect and instrument in the range – from the Pro-Q 3 equalizer, Pro-L 2 true peak limiter and Pro-C 2 compressor, to the Pro-R reverb, Saturn 2 multiband distortion, Twin analogue synth and beyond – now loads natively in macOS Big Sur running on Apple Silicon (or as a Universal Binary on Intel Macs), in VST2, VST3 and AU formats. Spearheading that optimization in the pro audio sector, FabFilter is proud to announce the introduction of Apple Silicon compatibility across its entire catalogue. If your principal use focuses on video editing, get the M1 Max. If your principal use of a laptop involves only limited video editing, get the M1 Pro. However, while the Rosetta 2 translation layer that enables software written for Intel processors to be used on Apple Silicon is impressive in its speed and stability, it’s not until that software is optimized for native deployment that the full potential of Apple Silicon can be realized. NOTE: Here’s an article that compares video compression speeds between Intel and M1 Macs using Apple Compressor, Adobe Media Encoder and ffWorks (ffMPEG open source software). FabFilter updates its plugin line-up with native Apple Silicon supportĪpple’s new M1 processor-based computers look set to kickstart a revolution in creative computing with a groundbreaking combination of performance and efficiency. Encode video at lightning speeds using Compressor on Mac Studio with M1 Max and M1 Ultra even in stunning 8K resolution.
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