Or perhaps click once on the “Image name” column, if the list is not already sorted this way, and then locate the “Adobe Premiere Pro.exe” process. Right click the Start menu and then select Task Manager from the list. When this happens I am unable to click on anything and I am also unable to do anything on the program. Then click the “Processes” tab, and take a close look to find a usual suspect. Run Windows Task Manager by right clicking on the start bar, and selecting “Start Task Manager”. If you log out, and log back again, you could save a little bit of time, and things should work fine again.īut there’s much quicker way to do it. But let’s be honest – you don’t want to waste precious minutes on shutdowns and reloading Windows, especially if there is a looming deadline ahead (and we all know that weird things happen when projects get close to completion…). One of them is the Task Manager which is what most people use to force-quit a software when it hangs or stops working.
If you restart your machine, everything works fine. Windows 10 includes a lot of software and utility tools for managing a PC.
Sometimes Premiere Pro crashes, and no matter how hard you try, you can’t reopen it by double clicking on the shortcut icon, or even directly attempting to open the Adobe Premiere Pro executable file. But then, some people still have problems from time to time. Since upgrading to CS5 I don’t remember the time when I actually lost anything in Premiere’s crash. Granted, crashes of Premiere have mostly been the thing of the past. …check if the process called Adobe Premiere Pro.exe is still running and kill it.