New user interface has been designed to be fast to use and to eliminate unnecessary clicks and settings to get working fast. New user interface improvements include a new streamlined project import, export and selection workflow, scrubbable media thumbnails to speed up shot selection, production metadata fields for entering on set shot notes and larger color control palettes to give faster access to grading tools. There are also new graphical palettes for control of power windows, keys, sizing, tracking and stabilization, camera raw .
New version features 'Log grading' in every corrector node, audio playback support up to 16 tracks per source clip and audio renders in both Quicktime and MXF, additional and faster automatic stereo 3D image alignment tool, plus new stereoscopic 3D floating windows and new 3D monitoring options.
For version 10 talks go to
http://www.personal-view.com/talks/discussion/6641/davinci-resolve-10
I don't know DaVinci but it seem that it is a nodal software ??
Looks great to me as a big fan of version 8. I wonder if some of the features demoed here are exclusive to the full version or if we get it all in the lite version? He does say it's "free" at the end.
@flash, regarding nodes, it's a simplified nodal system. Basically you add as many instances of color corrections as you want and you can turn them off or rearrange them however you see fit. Each node is a full set of all the corrections Resolve can make - primaries, secondaries, tracks, etc. But it's not quite full nodal compositing as you would see in Nuke or Shake.
Thanks Oedipax.
Interface re-designed to streamline the grading process
Clip Management
Conform
Color
Audio
Dailies
Deliverables
General
I had to install CUDA Toolkit 4.2 (the latest), otherwise it would say no CUDA devices found. Download here: http://www.nvidia.com/content/cuda/cuda-downloads.html
Maybe others had the same problem...
I also downloaded and installed the latest driver (on the same page).
Btw, I added beta links to FAQ so it'll be more easy for beginners to find out.
Good article about some new features:
Kind of a mixed bag for me so far - performance took a big hit on my machine versus v8 but the interface does look nicer.
Does the new version run on MacBookPros (2012 version, before they introduced the ones with retina display)? I tried the old version and it installed but then complained about the graphics card and would not start up.
In my Mac Book Pro 15" 2009 work with a 1440x900 monitor.
Thanks. Then I'll give the version 9 a try.
@Marcus 8.1 works on my MacBookPro early 2011. Not like a rocket but it works.
@Vitaliy_Kiselev the link to the class on demand course seems to be dead.
I'm trying out Resolve 9 on Windows 7 and the user interface looks pretty unfriendly so far. How do you:
Wow, I have to wonder whether BMD have ever used Windows before? There's no obvious way to save a project to a folder, or even to import your footage... Do you need an EDL just to get started?
EDIT: I see the problem - no AVCHD file support. Too bad, some of its features look like they would've been useful.
Strange, on Mac it works with AVCHD.
Switch the window mode so it's not always on top
You can't, and this is nothing new.
Switch between windowed and full-screen display
You can't, and this is nothing new. Also, they want you to utilize the display's whole resolution. I know with everything going on in there, I wouldn't want to be windowed either.
Drag the window to a second monitor
You can drag the scopes to a second monitor.
Minimize the main window to the Windows task bar
Press the windows key, or ALT + TAB.
There's no obvious way to save a project to a folder
Resolves saves the Projects to some default location, but if you wish to fetch it, you can "File > Export Project" and save it where you please.
or even to import your footage... Do you need an EDL just to get started?
Load clips into media pool from the Media tab. The whole Resolve process works from left to right. You do not need an EDL to get started. There's plenty of tutorials that answer these basic questions more in depth, like Youtube etc.
I see the problem - no AVCHD file support. Too bad
Transcoding is the solution here.
Also, they want you to utilize the display's whole resolution. I know with everything going on in there, I wouldn't want to be windowed either.
I think it is stupid. Kind of Windows Metro.
Transcoding is the solution here.
And we are in 2012 :-)
@Macalincag - "There's plenty of tutorials that answer these basic questions more in depth, like Youtube etc."
Thanks for the reply, but the only tutorials I was able to find were for versions prior to Resolve 9 on the Mac. While Alt-Tab does work, it seems there's no way to move the window to my calibrated secondary monitor, which has more workspace than my primary HDTV monitor.
I'm with Vitaliy on the transcoding issue, it would be a time-consuming step backward for me. Rewrapping the MTS files into MOV containers without transcoding might be workable, but I don't know if there's something comparable to ClipWrap that runs on Windows?
the only tutorials I was able to find were for versions prior to Resolve 9 on the Mac
The only reason I suggested those tutorials, even being aware of most of them being on Version 8, was for the basic questions you had like "loadings clips" and "EDLs". Those simple procedures are virtually the same on both versions and it doesn't take long to adjust to the new interface and execute it once you see how it's done on Version 8.
it seems there's no way to move the window to my calibrated secondary monitor
Yeah, it seems as though the desired monitor you wish to work on should be your primary monitor (with the Windows task bar).
on the transcoding issue
This does suck if you're only limited to the Windows platform because it works on the Mac like @nomad suggested. Maybe when it's no longer in Beta it will work. But if your working with AVCHD footage, then you most likely don't have to hit up Resolve as a step 1 for a first light, since they're completely viewable images to begin with. Which means you can do your edit then transcode the timeline to DNxHD, or what have you, then load it up in Resolve afterwards. Resolve also has a great "scene detection" tool that dices up your single timelined clip into the numerous clips as they were originally so you can grade each one separately as they were meant to be.
@Macalincag - "Yeah, it seems as though the desired monitor you wish to work on should be your primary monitor (with the Windows task bar)."
Actually, it seems as though BMD expects you to set up your computer as a dedicated Resolve workstation plugging into a Log and Transfer workflow. But as you say, it's still in Beta, and hopefully the release version will integrate more flexibly with Windows and Adobe-based workflows.
My personal view is that color grading tool for small teams must be just plugin for NLE, not a separate software.
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