I'm still trying to figure out how to make this work. DaVinci only gave me HUI/MCU options for "Other Controller" use. So, I had to go into preferences to start setting up a "handshake" with my lowly Artist Series Gear. Unfortunately the controller it was looking for was the Fairlight. Upon start up it was looking for the controller. I LOVE IT!!!! First off, the download was smooth, the install was effortless and, when I launched it, it gave me a little tour! Compared to Media Composer, which wouldn't launch at all, we're already waaaayyy ahead of the game and further strengthening my dislike for anything Avid! I downloaded DaVinci Resolve 15.2 FREE version. So as long as you don't do any visual effects at all it should all be dependent on the CPU as well as the memory subsystem throughput.Īnd of course, if all you're doing is swapping audio to video and outputting to some easy to watch format then you can either just ignore that the video is making your computer sluggish, because all you're doing is placing an audio file on a timeline which doesn't take long, or you can optimize for quicker operation in various easy ways (using lower quality playback for example, or rendering lower quality video offline). Resolve works very well for what I do - which is exactly what you do - render videos for clients to review.Īs for the actual requirements of Resolve if I remember correctly the GPU is responsible for the actual video effects applied and the CPU for debayering and decode/encode. I have both spinners for long term storage and libraries and backups and then SSDs for work drives. I'm running v15.x on my Win 10 Pro computer, a Ry(no-x) OC to 3.7GHz all cores, an old Nvidia 660 card with little memory on it. It can be a bit fidgety to set up routing for audio outputs that are rendered compared to what we're used to, but once you've done it it's easy. Is the free Win 10 version still available at their website? I'd love to be able to try it out! Thanks again for the reply! You should be able to get the free version of Resolve for Windows on their website. So what I'm looking for is a quick way to port over my audio for clip rendering for client approval. What does work and how well? My Video needs are VERY simple! My studio is based around Nuendo. Is the free Win 10 version still available at their website? I'd love to be able to try it out! Thanks again for the reply! If that isn't really the case, then I'd be very interested in your experience using the HUI/MCU control options with the audio portion of Davinci. It makes life simpler and better for me money well spent.Thanks so much for your reply! If it's really compatible with Artist Color, that SUGGESTS that it MIGHT accept Eucon, which means an "instant lock" with the audio. Moreover in macOS it's also configured to do the same things for Reaper, Logic Pro X, Studio One, and DaVinci. By default it also does convenient things within the web browsers. I have is configured to work in Reaper, Sonar, Studio One, PowerDirector 17, and DaVinci Resolve. It is agile and allows the buttons, ring and knob to do the same sorts of things in multiple products. What *does* work for me is my Contour Shuttle Pro V2. I have played with the MCU control via my Midas M32 for the Fairlight (audio) portion of DaVinci but I've not gotten any hint that color grading could work from the MCU protocol. In the 'Preferences' it lists 'Avid Artist Color' as one of the 'Color Grading Panel' options, and simply lists 'HUI' and 'MCU' (Mackie Control Universal) as the MIDI Control options under 'Audio Console'. I have the free version (not Studio) of DaVinci Resolve in Win10.
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