

- #Davinci resolve lite vs full version 1080p
- #Davinci resolve lite vs full version manual
- #Davinci resolve lite vs full version pro
Prior to Premiere 2019, I could not export Prores on Windows. Nice to know Prores is available natively in Resolve 16. we've been doing DCI 4K 60P out through our current Premiere 2019 setup with simply the GPU outputs (five in all). Having to connect every 30 days to validate doesn't sit well with security minded IT folks. In fact, we'd like to be completely offline, which is another reason we're dumping Adobe. Our current editing workstations are not regularly connected to the internet. I hope that this is no longer necessary in 16. A weird throwback to Y2K Adobe products before Mercury Playback Engine. I did note that on Resolve 15, titles needed to be rendered before playback.

Apparently you can't get there from here. Our projector and monitors are HDMI and Displayport. The Decklink 8K doesn't have any HDMI outs.

#Davinci resolve lite vs full version manual
I see in the manual there is support for automatic object removal, similar to AE's contextual object removal feature. How's the speed? NVENC/Premiere is giving us a bit faster than realtime encoding of DCI 4K to HEVC 4K output. We're starting to use that a lot this year with drone footage.Įncoding USING the nVidia card? So it's integrated into the app. Buying $29,000 worth of additional hardware is not in our budget. We're getting closer to considering the switch, but there are a number of issues that need to fall into place for us to make the switch. So we get both the information captured in every frame and can have the motion blur added in post to make it look smooth on a large screen We fix the judder by importing into AfterEffects and using that filter to change the effective shutter dwell to 180° and it looks great.
#Davinci resolve lite vs full version 1080p
What about supported output formats? Can we output Prores 4444, HEVC, DCI 4K sizes? We had problems with render errors just rendering 1080p h.264 on Resolve 15 and had to give up then.ĭoes Resolve 16 have a Pixel Motion Blur filter? Currently, when we shoot drone footage and do a slow yaw, the judder is quite bad because the shutter speed is high-but we can get perfect stills as there's no visible motion blur.
#Davinci resolve lite vs full version pro
We did try using an Intensity Pro 4K card, but the output was only 3.8K at 30Hz, not 4K/60P, and we'd need a separate card for every display device (not enough slots free in our workstation for that). With Resolve 15, we could not get any full screen output. Does the Studio version of Resolve do the rendering on GPU instead of CPU? (I found the lite version to be glacially slow rendering, compared to what I was used to with NVENC).įull screen output: In Premiere, I can set our Sony VPL VW675ES projector and our LG 31MU97-B DCI 4K displays as full screen outputs from the timeline by assigning different output ports on the GPU card. It's about 100x faster than using Adobe Media Encoder to make h.265 output, which is my main publication format since 2018. I'm used to using a plugin called NVENC, which uses the 3500 or so GPU cores to do the rendering. Is this a limitation of the lite version? Output from bridge cameras and drones doesn't produce a picture. Limited import/export formats: I noticed Resolve 15 lite only accepts professional cinema formats. Resolve 15 made SIGNIFICANT strides toward being usable. With each new version, I try out the free "lite" version. Frustrated longtime Adobe user, sick of the subscription fees, so giving a close look into Resolve.
