In the Premiere Pro 24.0 beta, Adobe is adding full hardware decoding and encoding support for Intel Arc GPUs. How well does this work, and does it make Intel a viable alternative to AMD and NVIDIA?

In the Premiere Pro 24.0 beta, Adobe is adding full hardware decoding and encoding support for Intel Arc GPUs. How well does this work, and does it make Intel a viable alternative to AMD and NVIDIA?
While the launch of NVIDIA and AMD’s consumer GPUs have been a major topic recently, NVIDIA is also starting to release the successor to their Quadro RTX line – starting with the RTX A6000. We have looked at how the A6000 performs in a range of professional applications to help you decide whether they are worth using in a new workstation, or as an upgrade in your current system.
With the launch of the AMD Radeon RX 6900 XT, we finally get a look at the top-end GPU from AMD’s 6000-series. We have looked at how the Radeon 6900 XT performs in a range of professional applications to help you decide whether they are worth using in a new workstation, or as an upgrade in your current system.
With the launch of the GeForce RTX 3060 Ti 8GB, NVIDIA is finally at the end of their 3 month rolling launch of the GeForce 30 series cards. We have looked at how the RTX 3060 Ti performs in a range of professional applications to help you decide whether they are worth using in a new workstation, or as an upgrade in your current system.
The Radeon RX 6800 cards are here, with AMD boasting significant performance gains over the previous generation. We have looked at how the 6800 16GB and 6800 XT 16GB perform in a range of professional applications to help you decide whether they are worth using in a new workstation, or as an upgrade in your current system.
The RTX 30-series cards are here, with NVIDIA boasting significant performance gains over the previous generation. We have looked at how the RTX 3070 8GB, RTX 3080 10GB and RTX 3090 24GB perform in a range of professional applications to help you decide whether they are worth using in a new workstation, or as an upgrade in your current system.
Adobe has been focusing fairly heavily on GPU performance in the latest versions of Premiere Pro, adding more GPU accelerated effects as well as GPU-based hardware encoding. NVIDIA’s new RTX 3070 8GB, 3080 10GB and RTX 3090 24GB cards are touted as having significant performance advantages over previous generations, but will this make any difference for the typical Premiere Pro user?
DaVinci Resolve has long been known for how well it utilizes the power of your GPU, but will it benefit from the raw power of the new NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3070 8GB, RTX 3080 10GB or RTX 3090 24GB video cards?
The RTX 30-series cards are here, with NVIDIA boasting significant performance gains over the previous generation. We have looked at how the RTX 3080 10GB and RTX 3090 24GB perform in a range of professional applications to help you decide whether they are worth using in a new workstation, or as an upgrade in your current system.
The new NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3080 10GB and RTX 3090 24GB provide terrific performance in DaVinci Resolve Studio, but most power users will want two or more GPUs in order to further increase performance. Do these GPUs work well in multi-GPU configurations, or are the new cards unsuitable for this kind of setup?