> And in the words of Shane Ross, the DX advantages are:
Yes, that is a good summary.
Unfortunately Shane listed those advantages as being "the selling point for the DX hardware (Nitris and Mojo)".
However, the reality is that Thin Raster support is the only item on that list that is actually supported buy Mojo DX. And TR has never crossed my edit bay -- and I doubt it ever will.
Just saying.
--- In Avid-L2@yahoogroups.com, "Job ter Burg (L2B)" <Job_L2@...> wrote:
>
>
> DX hardware still offers some bonuses.
> The following are NOT supported with Open I/O:
>
> Ancillary Data
> LTC I/O (Timecode over RS-422 is supported)
> Audio Punch-In
> Full Frame Stereoscopic 3D Simultaneous Capture/Digital Cut
> Hardware Codec Encode/Decode
> Multiple I/O Hardware Support in CPU
> Universal Mastering
> Thin Raster Timeline Modes
>
>
> And in the words of Shane Ross, the DX advantages are:
>
> - HD-RGB capture through dual link
> - DNxHD encoding (dual stream) Hardware encoding, built into the box
> - AVC-Intra encoding (dual stream), hardware encoding, built into the box
> - Both DNxHD and AVC-Intra encoders in the box at the same time
> - Full frame stereoscopic (3D) capture/monitor/output
> - Thin raster format support (meaning that it takes the burden of stretching out anamorphic footage to full screen off of the computer and shoulders the task itself)
> - Dual live sync
> - Always active analog and digital audio monitoring
>
>
> On 5 nov. 2011, at 21:10, Bogdan Grigoresco wrote:
>
> > Try to compete with BMD DeckLink HD extreme (995$), even when Nitris DX is down to 5,500.
>
Saturday, November 5, 2011
[Avid-L2] Re: BMD Resolve on Avid DX Hardware
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