I see on the forums that some people say 14 won't require the dongle but has there been official word from BM on this? Seems insane to require a dongle for software these days. I can't test 14 public beta studio as it requires a license from the previous version and the dongle. (which in 2017 still requiring a dongle is absolutely ridiculous). I live in Vietnam which makes it pretty impossible to get hold of version 12 and the physical dongle. Resolve doesn't crash but it is completely unusable. Edius 8 has been the only one that hasn't crashed while trying to edit native 4k video. I've tested Premier, Resolve 14 public beta and Edius 8. I have the identical XPS15 to your specifications in your signature. I can even run my timeline natively at full UHD and it still runs smoothly with no dropped frames. That configuration coupled with my purchase of DaVinci Resolve Studio is giving me the performance using 14 Beta 6 that I'm talking about. I bought the $2525 configuration you see below. Which hardware configuration do you have as that might be the problem? The Dell has models that range in price from USD $979 to $2525 with each step up adding more powerful hardware. Any tips on how to get my XPS to actually edit this 4k footage would be greatly appreciated. Ive tried changing my hard drive settings to AHCI, update my drivers to no avail. I've had to switch to HD timeline and down scale all the 4k footage to hd and generate optimized media otherwise I cannot use Resolve at all. I have the same model laptop as you but I am unable to get any 4k playback, editing anything working. So far the Dell is everything I wanted in a laptop. And very importantly I have the added advantage of watching my videos in 4K resolution before I upload to YouTube. I can now edit UHD 4K without having to first optimize or trans-code and I can now render H.264 quickly. DaVinci Resolve 14 Beta 4 now uses the NVIDIA GTX 10** series built-in decoding/encoding of H.264. h264 is better than 12.5 but not there yet. With 8 GB Vram you should be able to render almost all type of grades/efx in 4k not sure you will be able to do the same on XPS without the memory full issue.ĭon't be to hopeful with the 10x speed because on my tests is a bit faster r14 but definitely not 10x. I only had to switch to FullHD timeline (or use half resolution proxy) for real-time noise reduction preview. I can edit and light grade in real-time on a 4k 50p timeline. Ronnie Saurenmann wrote:I'm testing right now a Asus ROG 15.6 7700HQ, Gtx 1070 8 GB Vram with r14 b3 and is quite usable. For casual editing with light grading you can probably live with the XPS but you could have problem rendering in 4k with heavy grading. If the primary role of the notebook is mobile editing and grading I would recommended a gaming notebook with a 1070 8 GB Vram, there are some good 15.6 gaming notebook with the new GTX card. If it would have had 6 GB Vram would have been a safer investment. Problem with Resolve is that when you it the Vram limit it doesn't render anymore. I did test also optical flow + some basic grading in 4k and it did work. The problem is the GPU 4 GB Vram that it can be a limit for 4k delivery. I have tested Resolve 12.5 on a colleague XPS 7700HQ, GTX 1050 and is usable for editing and light grading in 4k. I'd sure like to know if anyone is using it with DaVinci Resolve and if so, I'd be delighted to hear your experience. I've been considering purchasing the latest Dell with the Kaby Lake i7 and the NVIDIA GTX 1050 GPU. It runs 12.5 just fine but as you might imagine, pitifully slowly. Gary Coombs wrote:I need to be mobile and my anemic Microsoft Surface Book i7 won't run Beta 14 without constant GPU full errors and constant crashing.
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