Mon Mar 20, 2017 5:42 pm
Plugged directly into the computer, the LG is being used as a secondary display, which isn't what we want.
Think of it his way: we want to monitor the video signal that is our product. We monitor it different ways, such as by displaying it on a calibrated reference monitor and scopes.
To do that, we need turn our computers into miniature TV stations that "broadcast" our signal, and then we need to "receive" that signal with our reference monitor and scopes.
Plugging the reference monitor directly into the computer doesn't monitor our video signal. It it just treated like a secondary display. Even if Resolve could put a grading image on it (like Scratch or Premiere), that isn't your video signal, it's the computer signal with the computer's color management.
To turn your computer into a mini TV station, you need a capture/playback device. BMD has range of them, depending on what kind of signal you need to "broadcast". For basic stuff, the UltraStudio or DecLink Mini Monitor is inexpensive (relatively) and easy to set up. If you are going to be monitoring scopes externally using a solution like ScopeBox running on a Mac mini, you'll also need the UltraStudio Mini Recorder to "receive" the signal "broadcast" by the Mini Monitor (or other similar device).
You will also need a method to calibrate the LG, but that's a whole separate issue for a separate discussion thread.
Enviado desde mi iPhone utilizando Tapatalk