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How2 Upgrade to Final Cut Pro 4 - the Right Way! This document courtesty of: Philip Hodgetts Make sure you have the right system Don't upgrade to Final Cut Pro 4 if your system is not up to specification. Final Cut Pro 4 has much higher system requirements than any earlier version. You cannot upgrade if:
Final Cut Pro will run on a system with only the bare minimum G4 but you won't be able to get RTExtreme or Soundtrack to run without the higher processor speed, AGP Graphics card and Level 3 cache. These are crucial to the enhanced performance of RTExtreme. Although Final Cut Pro has used the graphics card for some functions in the past, they have been mostly display related, which is why the Canvas and Viewer must be on the Apple supplied graphic card, not one in a PCI slot. With Final Cut Pro 4 even more of the processing power of the graphics card is used. Don't upgrade to Final Cut Pro 4 if you are not running OS X 10.2.5 or later or cannot run QuickTime 6.1 or later due to some legacy application. Final Cut Pro requires the improvements in OS X 10.2.5 and QuickTime 6.1. QuickTime 6.3 is recommended and will be installed with Final Cut Pro 4 if not already installed. If you need to run an earlier version of QuickTime, you cannot install Final Cut Pro 4. If you need to upgrade your operating system, see the instructions below. Don't upgrade to Final Cut Pro 4 if you do not have at least 384 MB of RAM - that's the absolute minimum. In practice, don't upgrade if you don't have at least 512 MB of RAM. OS X loves RAM and its performance will improve with more RAM. RAM is so cheap these days that there's no reason not to have at least 512 MB of RAM.
Don't attempt to upgrade to Final Cut Pro 4 if you do not have a DVD-ROM drive. The installers and data are provided on 4 DVDs with a 5th disc for Bias Peak. No DVD-ROM drive, no Final Cut Pro 4. The drive does not have to be internal or Apple supplied and it does not have to be a Superdrive (DVD-R). It just has to be capable of reading a DVD-ROM disk for installing. Do install Final Cut Pro 4 if you have a computer with the required system configuration. As always with digital video software, a faster processor with a fast graphics card and lots of RAM is preferred. Hard drive speed will also affect the amount of RTExtreme you will get with your system: dedicated SCSI RAID drives will let you get more real-time than with simple ATA internal drives or FireWire drives. Preparing to Upgrade Upgrading to Final Cut Pro 3 is the easiest part - put the DVD-R in, run the installer, and enter your registration details. Optionally install the Soundtrack and LiveType data. More information on installing Soundtrack and LiveType data is to be found later in this article. IMPORTANT: If Final Cut Pro 4's installer detects an existing OS X-compatible version installed on your system it will not require your earlier serial number. If there is no Final Cut Pro install on the computer you will be prompted to enter the serial number of your earlier version during the install. It is not necessary to have an earlier install in order to upgrade but you will need the full serial number. (The display on startup is missing the last three digits so you will need to find your original serial number from the documentation.) You will need your OS X Administrator's password to install new software. That's the simple part. Unless you're really prepared to upgrade it might not go smoothly and you'll regret it. Successful upgrading is in the preparation, and the sequence of events is very important. This is particularly important if you are going to upgrade to OS X 10.2 for the first time. In these follow items I'll be ranking the steps according to this scale:
To be honest, I did my upgrade with the 3 and 4 bullet point items only and have had no problems in the weeks I've been using Final Cut Pro 4. When to Upgrade The best time to upgrade is not the very moment you get the box from Apple or from your dealer! You should upgrade when you have no project under way and when the Media Drives are empty. Since that's set of circumstance are almost never likely to happen, at least wait until you are between projects. Final Cut Pro 4, like earlier versions, is backward compatible. Project created in version 3 or earlier will open in version 4. IMPORTANT: Projects from version 4 will not open in any earlier version. Before opening a Project in version 4, save a copy of the file and label it as version 3. That way you will be able to return to version 3 should there be a reason, however unlikely that is. I recommend keeping version 3 of Final Cut Pro on you drive if you have it already installed and use it to complete any current projects that were started in Final Cut Pro 3. There are some subtle changes to the data that is stored with a Clip in Final Cut Pro 4 that will not be present for a Project started in Final Cut Pro 3. That said, I have successfully worked on many projects from Final Cut Pro 3 in Final Cut Pro 4 but I have not attempted a batch capture of those projects. I have expect batch capture of an Final Cut Pro 3 Project in Final Cut Pro 4 will work at least as well as it did in Final Cut Pro 3, probably better, but I haven't needed to capture during the time I've been working with Final Cut Pro 4. Backup your System (internal) hard drive & Reformat the drive (for the most cautious only) This is NOT recommended. OS X, being a Unix based system does not need periodic re-installs. I do not recommend wiping the hard drive clean and reinstalling the operating system. These instructions are for those who feel they have to go down this path. I repeat it is not recommended. IMPORTANT: This will delete all information off the internal drive. Be sure to back up all other data - Projects, documents, graphics etc - and have all install disks for your software available after you reformat the internal drive. Backing up an OS X system folder is not as easy as it was with OS 9. OS X has tens of thousands of invisible files that are not copied unless you use a piece of software called Carbon Copy Cloner. It's a free utility available from http://software.bombich.com/ccc.html. Use Carbon Copy Cloner to make a copy of your System Folder or Partition to a FireWire drive. You might run Repair Permissions on the System disk first. To repair permissions, run the Apple Disk Utility normally found in Applications>Utilities and choose the First Aid Tab. Select the OS X boot volume in the list at the left (the actual named volume, not the device) and click Repair Disk Permissions. Let it run until it is finished.
You are now ready to proceed with the install. If you are this cautious you will want to install Final Cut Pro 4 and make sure it is working for a week before you start installing additional software. Run Repair Permissions Before installing your Final Cut Pro 4 update and associate programs, run Repair Permissions from the Disk Utility. To repair permissions, run the Apple Disk Utility normally found in Applications>Utilities and choose the First Aid Tab. Select the OS X boot volume in the list at the left (the actual named volume, not the device) and click Repair Disk Permissions. Let it run until it is finished. Backup your Projects folder There are two reasons to back up your Projects folder, particularly your Final Cut Pro projects. The first reasons is so you'll have a backup if anything goes wrong, but the second reason is that Final Cut Pro 4 will update the Project file so that it will no longer open in Final Cut Pro 3 or earlier. Having a backup means you can go back. I should explain that I do not believe there will be problems, but when it comes to my hard work I'm a 'belts and braces' kind of guy - just in case the belt breaks, I've got the braces to hold up my pants! Create a copy of your Favorites to get them to Final Cut Pro 4 Favorites are saved with Preferences. Final Cut Pro 4 will not share preferences from Final Cut Pro 3. Both applications retain their own preferences so they can continue to work in parallel. In order to make your Final Cut Pro 3 Favorites available for Final Cut Pro 4 you'll need to use this workaround. Create a new Project in Final Cut Pro 3 and call it something like "Favorites Exchange". You'll need some Clips but in reality a Slug, a Gradient and something with audio will be fine. What you'll need depends on what Favorites you have. Filters: Add all your favorite filters to one Clip. It can be in a Bin, the Browser or a Sequence, doesn't matter. If the Clip has audio it will take all your audio and video favorites. Transitions: Alternate a Slug and a Gradient Clip in a Sequence and add one favorite transition each time they meet, until you've applied all your favorite transitions. Motion Tab Settings: Add one motion tab setting to each Clip - those Clips in the sequence that you've used for your Transitions favorites would be good candidates. You can only have one set of Motion tab settings per Clip, and they're the most work to restore so only keep the ones you really need - but it's not that difficult. Save the Project and you're done.
Before you can use Final Cut Pro 4 you must have updated to OS X 10.2.5 or later. OS X 10.2.6 is safe to use with Final Cut Pro 4. If you do not already own OS X 10.2 you will need to purchase the retail upgrade and install it. OS X 10.2 is a completely new operating system, despite the apparent incremental naming. Once OS X 10.2 is installed, there are 3 more steps required to prepare for Final Cut Pro 4.
To repair permissions, run the Apple Disk Utility normally found in System>Utilities and choose the First Aid Tab. Select the OS X boot volume in the list at the left (the actual named volume, not the device) and click Repair Disk Permissions. Let it run until it is finished.
Install Final Cut Pro 4 Finally you're ready to install Final Cut Pro 4. Put the DVD in your DVD drive and do a standard install. You can only install to the OS X boot disk. If Final Cut Pro 4's installer detects an existing OS X-compatible installation on your system, it will not require your earlier serial number. If there is no Final Cut Pro install on the computer you will be prompted to enter the serial number of your earlier version during the install. It is not necessary to have an earlier install in order to upgrade but you will need the full serial number. (The display on startup is missing the last three digits so you will need to find your original serial number from the documentation.) The standard install will install:
A restart is required after installing. To install or not install - LiveType data and Soundtrack Loops? After upgrading Final Cut Pro will prompt you to install the Soundtrack Loops and LiveType data by running the installers on those DVD-Rs. This will take up 12-13 GB in total, and the LiveType data must install on your internal hard drive, in Library>Application Support>LiveType. Soundtrack Loops Soundtrack Loops can be installed anywhere, so feel free to install them on an external drive or convenient location in your internal drive, wherever you have space. Soundtrack will index the files when you add the location. You add the location by clicking into the Search Tab inside Soundtrack and then click on the Setup button. A window opens where you can add an additional directory, or remove directories. When done, click on Done and Soundtrack will index and remember the location.
LiveType Data LiveType data takes up a lot of space if it is fully installed - around 8 GB in total. If you have plenty of space on your internal drive you can do the default install and not worry. Otherwise choose one of these two options. They are not mutually exclusive.
Now any data that's installed, either as a complete install or an 'as needed' install, will go to the external location but be fully accessible from within LiveType.
If you have been running OS X you will have already had to update your Media Drives to HFS + a.k.a. Mac OS Extended. OS X will not recognize the older format. You will need to reformat any drives that have not been updated. Use the Disk Utility and choose the Erase tab to reformat. After Upgrading Repair permissions. Run the Apple Disk Utility normally found in System>Utilities and choose the First Aid Tab. Select the OS X boot volume in the list at the left (the actual named volume, not the device) and click Repair Disk Permissions. Let it run until it is finished. Install 3rd party drivers. If you are working with a hardware unit then you should install the drivers for the hardware. After installing it would not hurt to repair permissions again. Test Final Cut Pro 4 First things first. Test Final Cut Pro 4. Start a new Project, assign Scratch Disks and do some test captures. Add Clips to a Timeline and render some effects and transitions and test any G4 real time preview effects. Be sure everything is working as intended before going beyond this point. Do the LiveType, Soundtrack and Compressor tutorials to make sure they are working as expected. Work with Final Cut Pro 4 for a couple of weeks or at least a few days before adding other applications. Extensions and Control Panels back. Most people can't live with this option (myself included) but hold out as long as you can to prove that all is working well before adding additional software. This is overly cautious and you can continue working with your new software immediately. Restore your Favorites Open the Favorites Exchange Project in Final Cut Pro 3. It will update the Project format when opened. You want it to do this. Once open, restore your favorites by: Filters: Open the Clip with the Filters applied, in the Viewer. Select the Filters - all of them if you like - and drag them to the Favorites folder. They'll be immediately added with the original names. Transitions: Open the Sequence that has the Clips with the Transitions between them. Drag each Transition to the Favorites Folder. It will be added with the original name. Favorite Motions: A little less easy but not too bad. Open each Clip in the Viewer from the Timeline in turn. While the Clip is in the Viewer, choose the Make menu and select 'Favorite Motion'. The Motion Tab settings will be saved as a Favorite Motion again, under the name of the Clip so you'll have to rename the Favorite Motion again, but that's easier than redoing the settings, including any keyframes you might have had. And if it doesn't go smoothly? So far the only report of an install problem has been a DVD-R for LiveType that would not install correctly. The solution is to simply drag the files from the DVD-R to the hard drive. The files are not encrypted or in the package. Double click on LiveType Data and you will find all the files on the DVD-R. Copy the files to the default or your chosen location. One person has reported that Final Effects Complete appears not to be compatible with Final Cut Pro 4. That has not yet been confirmed. But it will go smoothly, and you'll love Final Cut Pro 4 and its ecosystem. |