

This guarantees that if anything does croak on that project, you still have the 2017 version ready to work. And use copies when you do even for operating projects!

I've been selecting projects in the Media browser and importing them quite reliably in 2018. I tend to use the Media browser, as it seems to work better except for the 2017 release, where the simple updating worked more reliably for me. or create a new project in 2018, and in the Media browser, navigate to a copy of a PrPro 2017 project and click the project file, and import the assets or even the project itself that route.
#Adobe premiere cc 2018 update
You can try simply opening them in 2018, which will choose to update the project. To test migrating old projects, always migrate a copy of the project file. You should now be able to "upgrade" with the Advanced options available, and again, uncheck the "remove previous versions" line. Sign out of your CC Desktop app, reboot, and sign back in. In fact, if your upgrade dialog does not give you the "Advanced Options" bit, cancel it. When you tell the CC Desktop app to upgrade, when the dialog box pops up, click on the Advanced Options box and uncheck "remove previous versions". If you still have the download for 2017, copy it to a different folder. Which means you can have both 20 installed together.īefore upgrading, check your downloads. But how big a percentage of the user base has them? Apparently, not so large. As someone with a decent 'sampling' of this board over the last 5 years, this is probably the fewest total posts per day for the first week or so of a release yet. I'm on 2018 on my Win10 rig, totally stable and working happily since day one.
