Andreas Kaufmann wrote:
I have a problem using the DCP tool with Davinci Resolve 11 (Full version).
Wenn starting to export all clips get a bizarre greenish unsaturated look.
Anyone else has this problem?
Andreas
This is not a problem. XYZ colour space looks like this on an RGB/Rec 709 monitor
Frank Glencairn wrote:
I delivered several DCPs via USBStick (commercials/short film) or on a regular NTSC formated external drive.
No Problems so far.
But yeah, they like those Linux drives in this totally overpriced drawer better, because it copies faster, since that expensive cinema servers usually only have USB2.
As I said before, it's a joke - the whole digital cinema server landscape is totally outdated (like 10 years behind contemporary technology), and there is room for a ton of improvement, but there is also a monopoly going on.
Most of the new servers can accept NTFS formatted media. So that's not a problem with new servers.
Older servers can only read from Linux formatted HDDs (not all Linux formats -- only EXT2/3 with
inode size128 ), on which the original delivery system of DCPs were based. Newer servers, while capable of reading NTFS format, will also read the original Linux format. So it's safe to deliver the DCPs in specific Linux formatted HDDs to be on the safe side and if you do not know on which server your DCP is playing.
It's not true that DCPs need to be delivered in CRU enclosures. They can be delivered in normal HDDs with USB3 interface. USB2 HDDs are okay, provided you give enough time to the servers (and they have the time) to ingest the DCPs.
For short DCPs (short films, trailers less than 4 GB) delivering in Pendrives formatted in FAT32 are perfectly fine. DCPs of short films and trailers can even be delivered in data DVDs also (readable in PC format) as all servers do have a DVD ROM (unless the drive has conked off).
For a summary of how you can deliver a DCP, this is a useful guide:
http://www.knuterikevensen.com/?p=437This guide also explains how to properly format into NTFS using a Mac and also says how to format in EXT2/3 with 128 inode sizing.
Edit: By the way, it might look that the whole digital server system is outdated. So are DVDs. We can't do anything about the standards already laid out. As in DVDs, you can overcome the specified regions by writing region free DVDs, the standard way to have compliance of your DCP in all the servers is to go with
specified Linux format.
Hope this helps.