So most Laptop slow down the speed of both the CPU and GPU. Graphics Cards with 6 GB or 8 GB of vRam generate a lot of heat, that is difficult to get rid of in a small cabinet, as in a tiny Laptop. And for 4K is the absolute minimum 6 GB of vRam on the Graphics Card, but minimum 8 GB of vRam or more are recommended. Competition will be good for us consumers.Įlse did Lisa Su President and CEO of AMD confirmed in early July on twitter, that the next generation of AMD CPU's called 'Zen 3 are looking great in the lab and will be certainly launching this year.'ĤK videos have 4 times the pixels of HD. They are both scheduled for 2nd half of 2020. We are all waiting for the next gen AMD High END Navi and the coming nVidea Ampere Graphic Cards. So for Resolve is there no reason to get a more expensive Quadro. Resolve do all its Image processing in RGB fp32. The GPU is used in both the free and Studio version, for all the image processing. In the paid STUDIO Version of Resolve, can certain combination of Codec, Resolutions, Bit width and Chroma subsampling be hardware decoded/encoded on either a AMD/nVidea Graphics card or in a Intel non Xeon CPU.Īnd YES. Resolve does all its image processing in the GPU on the graphics card. In Resolve the CPU is used to run the app, disk I/O and compression and decompression of codecs. But when you add a video card like the NVDIA Quadro RTX 3000 or similar to your config to a machine you easily end up in the region around € 3.000. Is the GPU a critical component when working with the free version?Īs I am a big fan of Lenovo business laptops I would prefer them to a "cheap" but powerful gaming laptop. A graphic card with 6 GB VRAM oder more (or even less?) So, for a workflow as described above, would you recommend: The official support document is from 2018.Īdditionally I haven't read any official info whether or not the GPU is used in the free version. When it comes to making a decision what hardware to buy I'm not quite satisfied with the "Minimum system requirements for Windows" that you will find on the main page as it does not mention the different resolutions, codecs and frame rates. Codecs are mostly AVCHD and DNxHD120, but others may also be used. Our main workflow is HD based, sometimes we film in 4K to zoom in later in the post production. In the current situation we are thinking about buying some laptops for editing that shall be used with DaVinci Resolve 16 (Free Version and / or Studio version) in combination with the Adobe CS products (mostly Premiere and AE). We work in a windows environment (still Win7 64 Bit) with Avid MC8. But I never actually worked on a real project with it. DaVinci Resolve is a cool and powerful product that I've tested and fiddled around with for a few times. I've been a long time reader but this is my first post.
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