Mark Day wrote:Well, beleive it or not, v.15 downloaded. Only problem is; when I go to open it, it says it "can't find the CUDA...". So I imagine I don't have the correct video card or whatever. Is that something that can be plugged in to the MAC Mini or does it have to be something already in my computer?
Okay, you must have a pretty old Mac Mini, from 2009 or 2010, right? Those are the only Mac Mini models that shipped with NVIDIA GPUs. This machine might be too old to update with the latest drivers, but read on below.
I've pasted the relevant text below from the configuration guide:
NVIDIA and CUDA drivers for Mac
Systems using NVIDIA GPUs and also not using DaVinci Resolve from the Apple App Store will need to have the correct NVIDIA and CUDA driver to operate the GPUs. While Resolve will check the CUDA version on your system you may have to update it after any OS updates.
There are two parts to successful operation of your NVIDIA CUDA based GPUs.
NVIDIA drivers
If you use Mac OS X 10.8.4 or newer then Apple supplies within the OS NVIDIA drivers for the Apple certified GPUs. If you plan to use a GPU that’s not certified for Mac the OS driver will not work. In these cases, while not officially certified you can download and try the NVIDIA web driver for non-Mac GPUs. Generally all older Mac certified cards will work with the latest driver.
CUDA drivers
If your Mac has NVIDIA GPU’s and does not have CUDA installed the DaVinci Resolve installer will load the latest CUDA drivers suitable for Resolve. If however your system already has a newer CUDA driver that Resolve needs, the DaVinci Resolve installer will not update this driver as this may cause problems with other applications you have that use CUDA.
If the message, “WARNING: No CUDA Acceleration Hardware Detected“ appears when you launch Resolve and your Mac contains the recommended NVIDIA GPUs and NVIDIA drivers for those GPUs, you will need to quit Resolve and update to the correct CUDA drivers.
After quitting Resolve, go to the Apple menu and choose System Preferences. Then click on the CUDA icon to reveal the CUDA Preferences and note the installed CUDA driver version.
If the installed drivers are older than the certified version listed on the Resolve installer readme, avoid clicking on the “Install CUDA Update” button and instead visit
http://www.nvidia.com/object/ mac-driver-archive.html to download the certified CUDA driver version.
Once the certified CUDA drivers are installed, you will be able to successfully launch DaVinci Resolve.
Resolve 19 Studio, M2 MacBook Air with 24 gigs of RAM; also Mac Pro 3.0 GHz 8-core, 32 gigs RAM, dual AMD D700 GPU.