Yes, good performance, no problems
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Earlier versions of Resolve Linux on Ubuntu were tricky, the installer was just a gigantic shell script without uninstall and with no checks before it started to install things
When something failed/Resolve didn't succeed in starting it was very difficult to clean up, try again
Daniel Tufvesson, creator of the thread made a fantastic script that converted Resolves 'installer' to a proper .deb package, this to keep track of dependencies and also enable a proper uninstall
Only bad thing it disabled BMD Control panel support
Later BMD got the Resolve installer much better, and Daniel's script wasn't required
This also kept Control panel support
I really like Ubuntu studio, it has a 'low latency' kernel which I believe is good for editing, install not more complicated, you can try it from USB stick/DVD without doing permanent install first
I've been working with linux for many years, sometimes boring
CentOS is Red Hat linux 'for free', ambition on both is stability, no extra risks
This means newer HW support, newer 3rd party application versions in the distribution is lacking/very delayed
One example is ImageMagick which on Red Hat/CentOS distribution can be several years old - requires separate compile from source if you need newer features, support for newer file formats, important bug fixes etc
One example from my Threadripper machine, the motherboard included a 10 Gbit enet card, CentOS from BMD didn't support it
Ubuntu just worked on first try!
Latest BMD CentOS ISO now supports the card, but this is typical for Red Hat/CentOS experience
Björn