

To overcome some of these obstacles, the engineering team at MainConcept has developed the first-ever plug-in for DaVinci Resolve Studio that offers the same features on all platforms, including Linux, Windows and macOS on Intel x86 as well as Apple Silicon. Blackmagicdesign offers Fusion as part of the Fusion tab in DaVinci Resolve 16 and as a separate product in Fusion Studio 16. And on Linux, DaVinci Resolve Studio users are faced with one more challenge: There is no native AAC rendering available under the Linux platform. It may look overwhelming at first glance as it’s so full featured, but that’s because it contains pretty much everything you need. DaVinci Resolve Studio has a shining reputation as the go-to software for efficient color grading and video that pops. For Apple systems, the native GPU acceleration is used for H.264 rendering which is an essential part of the macOS platform.įor the emerging H.265 standard, there are only hardware encoding options selectable in DaVinci Resolve Studio on all platforms i.e., HEVC software video encoding for exporting a project from the timeline is not available. DaVinci Resolve is an incredibly impressive piece of software.

*On macOS (Intel) and macOS (M1), GPU encoding is available via the Metal framework if it is supported by the hardware.įor example, under Windows, there are AVC/H.264 software as well as hardware encoding options for both Intel Quick Sync Video (IQSV) and NVIDIA NVENC, whereas on Linux there is no H.264 software codec but only NVENC hardware encoding for NVIDIA GPUs.
