Sean,
That's good news, indeed. IIRC, the mid-2010 MBP's were i7 duo cores, but not yet quad cores -- correct? From what I've read, Resolve works better on the Mac, which likely helped you.
Here are the specs on my machine:
Dell Precision M4600
Windows 7 Professional 64 Bit
i7-2860QM (2.5GHz, 3.6GHz Turbo, 8MB Cache) (basically an i7-2960XM)
15.6" 1080p, RGBLED-backlit, IPS PremierColor, 100% Adobe RGB Color Gamut, Anti-Glare screen
16GB DDR3 SDRAM 1600MHz
512GB Solid State Drive
2GB GDDR3 NVIDIA Quadro 2000M
The machine is mostly for CGI work in Maya and Houdini, and editing/graphics work in Adobe CS6, which it's spec'd for. I have enough CUDA cores to access Adobe's Mercury Playback Engine and Quadro cards work great for CAD/3D.
I'm hoping this setup is enough to learn Resolve on, so I can make the jump to a rig with a Quardo K5000 or higher setup in the next 18 months.
I recently read an article about the "relativity" of an "adequate system."
For a seasoned pro, my system definitely would not be up to snuff for high-end work on Resolve. But for someone new to Resolve, just wanting to learn color grading for a class, it might be a different story.
I'm hoping the speed of the processor, amount of RAM, solid state drive, and GPU RAM are able to get me through for now.
I'll let you know how things work after I install Resolve Lite this weekend.
Thanks again,
Zach
Sean wrote:Very surprisingly, I installed and booted up Resolve 9 on my mid 2010 15" MBP and it somehow runs (albeit very slow, but it does in fact run). Playback is very slow (often 1/2-1/4 of the frame rate I shot, but I can do my grading, scrub through, and render out just fine.
I was able to grade a PRHQ file straight out of the BMCC. Have yet to try RAW but I'm feeling optimistic.
Aside from it being a big laggy, it never crashed on me and I never got any error messages. YAY!
Specs:
Macbook Pro 15-inch, mid 2010
Processor: 2.66 GHz Intel Core i7
Memory: 8 GB 1067 MHz DDR3
Graphics: NVIDIA GeForce GT 330M 512 MB
Software: OS X 10.8.3