Greg Lee wrote:...Interesting that Resolve beat FCPX to the iOS punch...this is massive news.
It is massive for other historical reasons. There has long been "big talk" about porting high-end desktop applications to tablet devices. With the release of Windows 8 in 2012, Microsoft initially said there would be no further development of Win32 desktop APIs (hence desktop apps) because all future development would use the tiled "Metro" UI. This was intended to unify desktop and mobile development. It obviously did not work and most of the managers responsible for that were fired, demoted or resigned.
No company (inc'l Microsoft or Apple) has outlined a development path for moving full-featured desktop apps to a mobile device. To my knowledge there are no academic white papers discussing how this would be done. There is a fundamental paradigm conflict between the dense keyboard/mouse display with the associated UI constructs and the touch-oriented mobile display and its UI constructs. Beneath the UI layer there are issues with threading, concurrency management, cross-process IPC, plugins, etc.
EVEN IF the initial Resolve iPadOS version "only" supports cut page and color page, it is still a major achievement in the history of software development. Apple and Microsoft have gigantic R&D departments and have been working for years on porting major desktop apps to mobile UIs. If tiny little Blackmagic manages to be the first, it begs the question of what special secret their small development team has.
In 1981 a non-fiction book about a computer company won the Pulitzer Prize -- Soul of a New Machine by Tracy Kidder. I worked for that company. My hope is eventually a similar inside story will be known about how Blackmagic's software division has accomplished such high productivity.