DaVinci Resolve Studio: NVIDIA RTX 6000 Ada Performance
The RTX 6000 Ada is the first of NVIDIA’s Ada Lovelace professional GPUs, and we are excited to see how it stacks up in DaVinci Resolve Studio against both the previous generation RTX cards and their competition from AMD.
DaVinci Resolve Studio: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 40 Series Performance
The RTX 4070 Ti rounds out the initial trio of NVIDIA’s GeForce RTX 40 series GPUs, and we are excited to see how these cards stack up in DaVinci Resolve Studio against both the previous generation RTX cards and their competition from AMD.
DaVinci Resolve Studio: 13th Gen Intel Core vs AMD Ryzen 7000
Intel’s new 13th Gen processors have just launched, hard on the heels of AMD’s recent release of their Ryzen 7000 Series. Intel and AMD currently trade blows in DaVinci Resolve Studio depending on the types of codecs you work with, with Intel leading for H.264/HEVC, and AMD leading for RAW media. Will the new 13th Gen allow Intel to take the top spot for DaVinci Resolve across the board?
DaVinci Resolve Studio: AMD Ryzen 7000 Series vs Intel Core 12th Gen
AMD’s new Ryzen 7000 Series of processors have arrived, promising faster performance along with new features like support for DDR5 memory. Intel has historically had an inherent advantage for video editing due to their Quick Sync technology that allows for greater hardware decoding of H.264/HEVC media, but the improved performance of Ryzen 7000 may allow them to take the lead for DaVinci Resolve, especially for intraframe and RAW codecs.
DaVinci Resolve Studio: AMD Threadripper PRO 5000 WX-Series vs Intel Xeon W-3300
AMD’s new Threadripper PRO 5000 WX-Series CPUs have arrived, promising faster performance with the same high core count and platform features found in the previous generation. Workstation-class CPUs like Threadripper Pro are often used for high-end workflows in DaVinci Resolve Studio, both for their processing power, and for their ability to effectively utilize multiple GPUs. The question is: just how must faster are these new CPUs compared to their main competition: the Intel Xeon W-3300 series?
Webinar: How to Choose the Best Hardware for DaVinci Resolve
DaVinci Resolve is a feature-rich application used for a wide range of post-production tasks and whether you primarily work in the Edit, Color, or Fusion tabs (or all three!), nothing is worse than when your computer gets in the way of your creativity. In this 45-minute webinar, Matt Bach will cover the best hardware for DaVinci Resolve – from CPU, GPU, RAM, and storage – and how your decision may change depending on your workflow.
DaVinci Resolve Studio: Intel Core i9 12900KS Performance
Intel is expanding their “Core” series lineup with the new top-end Core i9 12900KS. Compared to the 12900K, this new CPU has a slightly higher base and boost frequency, but in exchange requires a bit more power. DaVinci Resolve is known for how well it utilizes high-end GPUs, but the CPU is also a critical part of the performance equation. But does that translate into the Core i9 12900KS being a worthwhile investment?
DaVinci Resolve Studio – NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3090 Ti Performance
NVIDIA’s new GeForce RTX 3090 Ti is here, with higher performance than the RTX 3090, but a much higher price tag and power draw to go along with it. In this article, we will look to see how the RTX 3090 Ti performs in DaVinci Resolve Studio compared to the rest of the RTX 3000 series, as well as the AMD Radeon RX 6900XT.
What Hardware do You Need to Edit DPX files in DaVinci Resolve Studio and Premiere Pro?
DPX (Digital Picture Exchange) is a uncompressed, lossless image format that is is popular in the film and VFX industry and is often the go-to choice in high-end workflows where you need the best possible quality. The downside to DPX is that since it is uncompressed, the total file size can be absolutely massive – up to 266GB per minute. What kind of storage setup do you need to be able to edit DPX files, and do you also need a powerful CPU and GPU as well?
DaVinci Resolve Studio: 12th Gen Intel Core vs AMD Ryzen 5000 Series
Intel has launched their new 12th Gen Intel Core desktop processors (code-named “Alder Lake”) featuring support for DDR5, PCIe 5.0, as well as a completely new hybrid architecture using a mix of Performance and Efficient-cores. This is a lot of new technologies in one product, so we are excited to see how much of a performance boost the 12th Gen CPUs will see in DaVinci Resolve Studio.