Sat May 29, 2021 3:29 pm
I have used Linux distros as my sole operating system for 20 years and I have noticed a few things. Most Windows computers have the exact same libs (library files, .dll files), so most consumer Windows machines will be somewhat identical. Linux, however, is a different case. Some Linux distros have a rolling release cycle (library files continually upgrading) while others have new releases every year (library files don't change within a release), you could pull up five different Linux computers and the library files are all very different. I remember having a couple of apps that worked perfectly in one Linux distro but wouldn't work at all, without major changes, in a different distro.
Many video editors for Linux are distributed as flatpacks or standalone apps where the required libraries are included in the editor package - this solves the problem of widely varying library files between Linux distros but greatly increases the file size of the video editor package. In order to support every Linux distribution Black Magic Design would have to test their software releases on every Linux distro - and there are hundreds of Linux distros with new ones appearing all the time, it's simply too much work to keep up with.
The problem is, at least in my opinion, that the Linux world suffers from too many cooks in different kitchens and most of those cooks aren't interested in, or outright refuse, collaboration.
I'm glad BMD doesn't support every Linux distro.. we'd have to wait years for new DaVinci Resolve releases.
Kind regards,
Ian MacGregor