Install Davinci Resolve 17 in Ubuntu, Linux Mint, Debian, and Its Based Distributions (2021)
All you need to do to install Davinci Resolve 17 on Debian, Ubuntu, and its based distributions like Linux Mint, Elementary, and Pop! OS. I create a new video because the script to was updated to support the latest Davinci Resolve 17 and 16 (Free and Studio).
Previous Davinci Resolve Video : https://youtu.be/7RytZHSXNbc
Install NVIDIA Driver on Ubuntu : https://youtu.be/8FHxBF_dj1o
Multimedia Codec on Ubuntu : https://youtu.be/LW8F97qQzVE
OBS Studio as Screen Recorder : https://youtu.be/Z30pzGb85Fg
Blackmagic Design has just released Davinci Resolve 17, a non-linear professional video editing software which includes tools for editing, visual effects, motion graphics, color correction, audio post production, and extensively used in the moving-making industry, especially Hollywood.
What’s New
– Next generation HDR color correction with customizable wheels and tonal zones
– Mesh and grid based color warper delivers an entirely new way to transform color
– Magic mask automatic object isolation powered by the Davinci Neural Engine
– Improved color management with tone mapping and color space aware tools
– Massive Davinci wide gamut color space for higher quality image processing
– High speed audio editing with new keyboard and mouse context-sensitive tools
– Fairlight Audio Core engine with auto load balancing and support for 2,000 tracks
– Revolutionary FlexBus architecture for audio routing without limitations
– Automatic transient detection for beats, words, and sound effects
– Support for massive audio projects with thousands of tracks on a single system
– Metadata based card view in media pool on cut page
– Precision audio trimming on the cut page timeline and graphical trimmer
– Smart reframe powered by the Davinci Neural Engine on cut and edit pages
– Live effect, title, and transition previews on cut and edit pages
– Import and edit projects from ATEM Mini Pro ISO
– Proxy media workflows up to 1/16th resolution in H264, H265, ProRes or DNxHR
– Timeline based clip syncing to create multicam and compound clips
– Alpha support for keying and compositing on cut and edit pages
– Render in place command for effects heavy clips on cut and edit timelines
– Make source side adjustments before editing clips into the timeline
– Portable timeline and bin files for easy sharing
– Native interlace processing and realtime 3:2 pulldown removal
– Node tree bookmarks, customizable Fusion toolbar, and vertical node layouts
– Support for growing files in media pool
– Support for frame based metadata for BRAW, ARRI, RED, Sony and EXR
– Workflow integration API and third party encoder API
Please keep in mind, Davinci Resolve 17 is still in beta and may contain bugs. If you’re new to Resolve or rely on it for professional purposes, don’t upgrade.
Upgrading to Davinci Resolve 17 will require you to update your project database. This is irreversible and you will not be able to downgrade to the previous version without a backup.
But if you’re a hobbyist, using it for fun or educational purposes, feel free to use whichever one you’d like. FYI, Resolve 17 now supports mp3 files out of the box.
System Requirements
– CentOS 7.3
– 32 GB of system memory
– Blackmagic Design Desktop Video 10.4.1 or later
– Discrete GPU with at least 2GB of VRAM
– GPU which supports OpenCL 1.2 or CUDA 11
– NVIDIA/AMD Driver version – As required by your GPU
– A minimum NVIDIA driver version of 450.51.06 is recommended
As stated in the list above, Blackmagic Design officially supports CentOS only. But it doesn’t mean we can’t use it on other Linux distribution. DR requires NVIDIA cards as well as proprietary graphics drivers to work.
There are reports that AMD GPU may work now, but I can’t try this myself since I don’t own AMD card.
Downloads
– NVIDIA Linux Drivers : https://bit.ly/34ZQHsg
– Davinci Resolve Linux : https://bit.ly/3frhnER
– MakeResolveDeb Script : https://bit.ly/314G3xy
Dependencies
– libssl1.1
– ocl-icd-opencl-dev
– fakeroot
– xorriso
A reminder for those who are getting error in Ubuntu that OpenCl or CUDA is not detected. Launch the app by right click and “Launch using Dedicated Graphics Card”, the error should be resolved. Thanks to CUN_009.
The option is available on GNOME desktop out of the box. IDK, if KDE Plasma, XFCE, or other desktop environment have that option.
The software doesn’t have any window decoration. Hold the Alt or Super key and drag the window while holding the left mouse button. You can also move the window using Alt + F7 or resize the window using Alt + middle click.
Music by https://soundcloud.com/roa_music1031
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