Adobe Autoplay 60 — Top & Recommended

Some editors prefer transcoding to an edit-friendly codec.

Headline: Why Your Video Stops After 60 Seconds in Adobe (And How to Fix It)

Are you previewing videos in Adobe Experience Manager or using an Adobe-based player on your site, only to have the video stop or freeze after exactly one minute?

You aren't imagining it.

This is often related to Autoplay Logic vs. Analytics Heartbeats. When a video is set to "Autoplay," the browser often treats it differently than a video a user manually clicks "play" on. Because the user hasn't physically interacted with the player, some Adobe analytics configurations time out after 60 seconds because they think the view is "passive" or "background" activity.

Quick Fixes to try:

Has anyone else seen this specific timeout in their implementation? Let me know in the comments. adobe autoplay 60

#Adobe #VideoEditing #TechSupport #UserExperience


Surprisingly, audio drivers cause video stutter.

To the uninitiated, "Autoplay" usually refers to videos starting automatically on a webpage. In the Adobe ecosystem, however, it refers to timeline scrubbing and playback behavior. Some editors prefer transcoding to an edit-friendly codec

When a user searches for "Adobe Autoplay 60", they are looking for a way to:

The "60" is critical. Standard playback is 24fps or 30fps. 60fps requires the computer to process more than twice the data per second. If your system isn't dialed in, you get the dreaded "Red Bar" on top of your timeline.

If all else fails, "Adobe Autoplay 60" is a hardware failure. You need: Has anyone else seen this specific timeout in

In File > Project Settings > General, set the Renderer to Mercury Playback Engine GPU Acceleration (CUDA) – if NVIDIA, or OpenCL/Metal for AMD/Mac.

While most searches target Premiere Pro, After Effects users also search "Adobe Autoplay 60."