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DaVinci Resolve 20 Public Beta 1 Out Now (Not a Deal)


ZincT

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What’s New in DaVinci Resolve 20

DaVinci Resolve 20 introduces more than 100 new features including powerful AI tools designed to assist you with all stages of your workflow. Use AI IntelliScript to create timelines based on a text script, AI Animated Subtitles to animate words as they are spoken, and AI Multicam SmartSwitch to assemble a timeline with camera angles based on speaker detection. The cut and edit pages introduce a dedicated keyframe editor and voiceover palettes, and AI Audio Assistant analyzes your audio and intelligently creates a professional audio mix. In Fusion, explore advanced multi layer compositing workflows. The Color Warper now includes Chroma Warp, plus Magic Mask and Depth Map have huge updates.

https://www.blackmagicdesign.com/support/

 

 

 

Edited by ZincT
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  • ZincT changed the title to DaVinci Resolve 20 Public Beta 1 Out Now (Not a Deal)

Quite a few new features and significant updates with this release. I can definitely see how the voice modeling can/will cause some contention (37 minute mark and onward in the above video)... way too easy to abuse this feature (without the person's consent). Also note that it seems many of these new features are linked to the Studio version, but I couldn't find a definitive list quickly to verify (only the generic descriptions on the main download page near the bottom).

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38 minutes ago, mettelus said:

Quite a few new features and significant updates with this release. I can definitely see how the voice modeling can/will cause some contention (37 minute mark and onward in the above video)... way too easy to abuse this feature (without the person's consent). Also note that it seems many of these new features are linked to the Studio version, but I couldn't find a definitive list quickly to verify (only the generic descriptions on the main download page near the bottom).

Yeah, I thought the same re the voice modelling @mettelus 

There's more info on this page (uk page but there's probably a  similar one for other regions):

https://www.blackmagicdesign.com/uk/products/davinciresolve

At the bottom of the page, regarding Studio vs free versions it says

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Includes everything in the free version plus the DaVinci AI Neural Engine, dozens of additional Resolve FX, temporal and AI spatial noise reduction, text based editing, magic mask, film grain, optical blur and more. It also supports 10-bit video up to 120 frames per second and resolutions beyond 4K.

 

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I own the studio version and it's more than worth it, considering it's a fraction of the cost of using Adobe Premiere. Yes, you get more products, but the value only comes into play if you actually use the other ones.   I won't get into politics, but there is a price increase due to new tarrifs. Still a bargain

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4 hours ago, dubdisciple said:

Yes, you get more products, but the value only comes into play if you actually use the other ones.

There are quite a few comparisons between the two apps, but they are often biased one way or the other (can tell from the embedded advertisements). I finally remembered where I saw a nice overview comparison, and it was a sidebar in a video of editing 3D drone footage... of course I cannot readily find it. Bottom line to that was in addition to the Premiere Pro subscription, you also need a Mocha Pro subscription, which ends up being $600+/year combined (can be over $1000). Resolve Studio is a one-time purchase ($295) with free upgrades for life (it has gone on sale more cheaply, but is very rare with one recently for $235), and includes the most of the FX you would get Mocha Pro for. One video I just saw (bookmarked for the price part) the guy joked that price is the "low hanging fruit" (everyone knows this), and his bottom line reasoning was that using Resolve is like a fluid video game (which can get resource heavy) versus Premiere which can stutter and glitch as it thinks to repaint itself when shifting work flows/tasks.

[Sidebar of my own with a little more background] That said, the reason for the price difference is also that Black Magic Design makes money from (sometimes VERY expensive) cameras/hardware. Resolve Studio is actually free if you choose go that route for obvious reasons. Similarly, the 3D camera I got is from Insta360 (the ONE RS Twin edition) which also has a free Insta360 Studio app (both for phone and computer), but you can only use it if you have a camera linked/registered. That app actually taps into the camera memory, so you can do a lot of rough editing/camera control from your phone in the field (remote control), and the desktop app has advanced leaps and bounds in the past 5 years, allowing for very quick initial editing before pulling footage into a heavier hitter like Resolve or Premiere. My 3D interest initially stemmed from the ability to track a moving target without needing a camera operator (the object "tracking" is done post-production), and the fact that the lenses each see 220 degrees, so they auto-zip that overlap to remove the selfie stick, stand, or drone carrying it (but you can see the shadow of it on the ground in the link above). I have never had the guts to submerge it, but it is also water-proof to 16ft. In just the past 5 years, a lot of their smaller cameras have gotten more capable (higher frame rates and resolutions), but the ONE RS is still the same model I got. Some really nice features with those cameras are the "FlowState Stabilization" (for bebopping around while doing things) and "Horizon Lock" (to keep the view level)... these are shown in the link above. Their cameras actually record gyro response in the video footage, so you can get movie quality results with the ability to field edit before sitting in front of a computer for the final post-production.

Quick edit: Their Insta360 Studio app also allows for exporting a "flat print" of a 3D video (with the focal point and focal point tracking of your choosing), so you can pull that rough edit into a video editor that cannot handle 3D footage.

Edited by mettelus
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1 hour ago, mettelus said:

There are quite a few comparisons between the two apps, but they are often biased one way or the other (can tell from the embedded advertisements). I finally remembered where I saw a nice overview comparison, and it was a sidebar in a video of editing 3D drone footage... of course I cannot readily find it. Bottom line to that was in addition to the Premiere Pro subscription, you also need a Mocha Pro subscription, which ends up being $600+/year combined (can be over $1000). Resolve Studio is a one-time purchase ($295) with free upgrades for life (it has gone on sale more cheaply, but is very rare with one recently for $235), and includes the most of the FX you would get Mocha Pro for. One video I just saw (bookmarked for the price part) the guy joked that price is the "low hanging fruit" (everyone knows this), and his bottom line reasoning was that using Resolve is like a fluid video game (which can get resource heavy) versus Premiere which can stutter and glitch as it thinks to repaint itself when shifting work flows/tasks.

[Sidebar of my own with a little more background] That said, the reason for the price difference is also that Black Magic Design makes money from (sometimes VERY expensive) cameras/hardware. Resolve Studio is actually free if you choose go that route for obvious reasons. Similarly, the 3D camera I got is from Insta360 (the ONE RS Twin edition) which also has a free Insta360 Studio app (both for phone and computer), but you can only use it if you have a camera linked/registered. That app actually taps into the camera memory, so you can do a lot of rough editing/camera control from your phone in the field (remote control), and the desktop app has advanced leaps and bounds in the past 5 years, allowing for very quick initial editing before pulling footage into a heavier hitter like Resolve or Premiere. My 3D interest initially stemmed from the ability to track a moving target without needing a camera operator (the object "tracking" is done post-production), and the fact that the lenses each see 220 degrees, so they auto-zip that overlap to remove the selfie stick, stand, or drone carrying it (but you can see the shadow of it on the ground in the link above). I have never had the guts to submerge it, but it is also water-proof to 16ft. In just the past 5 years, a lot of their smaller cameras have gotten more capable (higher frame rates and resolutions), but the ONE RS is still the same model I got. Some really nice features with those cameras are the "FlowState Stabilization" (for bebopping around while doing things) and "Horizon Lock" (to keep the view level)... these are shown in the link above. Their cameras actually record gyro response in the video footage, so you can get movie quality results with the ability to field edit before sitting in front of a computer for the final post-production.

Quick edit: Their Insta360 Studio app also allows for exporting a "flat print" of a 3D video (with the focal point and focal point tracking of your choosing), so you can pull that rough edit into a video editor that cannot handle 3D footage.

I got my license with purchase of Speed Editor which was same price as Resolve Studio.  As a longtime Adobe user ( I used to be a tutor for Adobe products), I often used Mocha. One of my issues with Boris products( I think Boris bought them out) is the  licensing was constantly changing with drastic pricing jumps and they would disappear on their site.  I find the planar tracker in resolve is suitable amd integrates nicely.  The hardest Adobe product for me to replace now is After Effects, but this update brings more After Effects like features into Resolve.  Fusion was never meant to be like After Affects. It is a powerful compositer, which ot is superior to AE at doing. 

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+1, I haven't had the time to kick the tires on 20 yet, but will soon. One of the nice adaptations across the board with video editors is they are realizing (and catering to) their "hobbyist" markets more. With the prevalence of short-form/portrait video apps, there has been a definite streamlining of being able to work with and deliver those with a lot less pain than years ago. The "vertical workspace" in Resolve 20 actually stuck out to me for this reason... there are a lot of people that want to "just edit and finish" something rather simple without the need to "deal with" the format or all of the other features they may not care about. It used to be the thumb rule was "shoot landscape even if delivery is portrait" (losing resolution, but avoiding the pain of a portrait-to-landscape scenario), but is nice to see that is falling by the wayside since the tools have evolved.

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