It depends on how you define "edit HD."  Earlier versions cannot edit it
natively without 3rd party vendor support. And there wouldn't be automatic
understanding of 1920 1.0 PAR vs 1440 1.333 PAR, and other such format
details. 

But, in the end, HD is nothing more than a bigger frame size. True, I'm
glossing over some of the fine print of HD, but if you can build a 1920 x
1080 project, and if you can export a 1920 x 1080 movie at 24/25/30 frames
per second, that's HD. 



Jeff Schell www.jeffschell.com
. Adobe Certified Expert (ACE) . Adobe Certified Instructor (ACI)
. On-Site, Classroom Training for Premiere Pro, After Effects, Audition,
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. Books: Premiere Pro 2 Hands-On-Training . Premiere Pro 1.5 H-O-T
. DVDs / Online Tutorials: Premiere Pro 2 Essential Training at Lynda.com

-----Original Message-----
Jeff writes "You're right that HD is nothing more than a bigger frame size."

Well, that was my GUESS, but I can't seem to find out if there's anything
else to it.  if this is the case, then it seems totally reasonable for
someone to say "Premiere 6.5 can edit HD," and i recall that being a no-go.



 
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