Thu Sep 13, 2018 10:39 am
Great video - for the pros - illustrating the amazing power of Resolve in a pro studio workflow. I don't know of any $100K edit apps now days but our $300 Resolve is running on some heavy hardware here (dual xeons, 6 X1080TIs etc).
Some FX animation apps like Maya, Cinema 4D, etc are still fairly expensive and can use lots of CPU cores (at least 32) for 3D render but still great for hollywood budgets with teams of animators and render farms.
What market is BMD targeting?
At $1K for Resolve plus $1K for Fusion it was still reasonable for the pros.
At $300 for both plus Fairlight in ver 15 it's competitively priced for the much larger non-pro market shooting up 4K and publishing for web or for UHD TV (HDR) but seems to be losing it's laptop portability due to increased hardware demands (from 14 to 15) and current BMD recommended hardware is beyond the "consumer" HEDTs commonly used for gaming etc which are still fine for other NLEs like Premiere etc.
Resolve hardware demands are now a concern. Some forum members are even suggesting users go back to 12.5 for their laptops. Yet Andrew Kolakowski suggested a long time ago that he could edit 4K on a 2 core laptop using Premiere and Cineform which BMD could also use for increased portability and reduced hardware demands. Plus we still don't have a decent AVC/HEVC encoder yet.
The concept of professional NLE, Audio, and VFX apps is great but a single all-in-one software solution at consumer prices with pro-hardware demands seems like an oxymoron. The bigger it gets the more difficult it becomes to support and stabilize.
Would it help performance if ver 15 was modular - ie we could select whether to load Fusion and Fairlight at startup?
Resolve 15.3 free Win 10 64bit