![]() Not even knowing if you are Mac or PC makes a difference.Įveryone that is working with a iGPU of any sort, 99% of the times, has to do just a quick and dirty color correction and grade, no effects no NR. HaveBlue wrote:There is no spec on GPU because it depends on what you are trying to do. So clearly is more a driver compatibility then a "low powered gpu". Well with the one from intel DR crashes while using any ResolveFX or even just using the Shadow or HL sliders in the second group of Color Wheels tab, basically everything crashes but then when using the older drivers every tool works properly and the only downside is that I get slower performance in comparison as I was on Windows 1806 with those driver (but here is because I'm using the drivers for the 1806 on the 1809 version of Windows), I tried to contact multiple times HP but they are not responding except the first time that they released a "not so optimized" drivers for the 1809 but that have the same problem (crashing) as using the latest intel 24/25.XX drivers (with the latest stable version 25.20.100.6519 Resolve 15.2.3 does not even detect the iGPU). Everything started breaking apart when Windows 1809 came out, mainly because HP didn't release a igpu drivers for that version, so the choice were two, first installing the official intel's one, second installing the older version hp one's. I do have a laptop with only a i5 8250U UHD 620 from HP, and lately they are messing alot of things with the graphics drivers, and they are not the only one (did a test once with a MSI laptop with a UHD 630 getting the same resault). This is actually a driver problem more than a "low powerful" hardware. ![]() DaVinci Resolve is one of the best video editing programs in the business and a staple for filmmakers, businesses, and other types of content creators.Peter Chamberlain wrote:Can you install a much more powerful GPU? While DaVinci Resolve is an incredibly powerful tool, the software can only be as good as the hardware it’s running on. As a video editor, it can sometimes be a challenge to decide on what hardware to choose. The question is: which hardware is best for you and which hardware is optimal for DaVinci Resolve? There are a plethora of CPU and GPU options out there and a few different operating systems as well. Note: You can transcribe with Simon Says natively within Resolve (and in 100 languages). Simon Says is very light on CPU requirements and all the minimum specs listed below would support the integration with Resolve. For post-production work, especially for ones that require an intense workflow, it’s important your machine is above the minimum system requirements.ĭaVinci Resolve minimum requirementsĭaVinci Resolve is able to run on both low-end and high-end devices and is one of the only NLEs that runs on Linux as well. To run DaVinci Resolve, you don’t need anything incredibly powerful, but it’s still important to check and see. Integrated GPU or discrete GPU with at least 2GB of VRAM and supports Metal or OpenCL 1.2įor those running Windows devices you should have.M1 Apple Silicon CPU (or intel core i7 on older macs).8 GB of system memory (16 GB for intense graphics work).For those using macOS devices, you should have: The system requirements for DaVinci Resolve 18 and DaVinci Resolve 17 vary from operating system to operating system though. ![]()
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