It’s an improvement for sure, though maybe not as big as hoped as Final Cut only took 9 seconds. Stabilization is up next and it took 30 seconds compared to a previous speed of 37 seconds. That’s basically in line with Final Cut and a two and a half minute improvement over the previous version of Resolve. The initial test with a 5 minute 4K H.264 export is down to just 3 minutes 9 seconds. But can Resolve now take on Final Cut directly?įrom initial tests and the benchmark projects in Resolve, Max is noticing that the GPU use is lower, indicating that optimizations are definitely better. Resolve even claims 8K editing on the M1 chip.įinal Cut has been great since the launch of the M1, Premiere is iffy at best, and Resolve has been doing a good job. For the money it is undeniably a powerful machine, but it is still surprising to see video editing performance be good and continue to get better. Max actually uses practically the base MacBook Air for his daily use – the one with only 8GB RAM. For more details on how well Resolve works (and where it still might need a little more work) in this latest version check out this video from Max Yuryev who runs everything through another set of tests. Most recently hitting version 17.3, Resolve might actually be challenging Final Cut for most optimized NLE on Mac. Blackmagic Design is getting in early to the M1 chip game with a constant stream of updates for DaVinci Resolve. Software is truly starting to show its potential and getting impressively updated to take advantage of the new chip architecture.
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