Thanks, Scott. Kind of validates my thinking. My heightened interest in Resolve is due to the upcoming school year. Over the past few years there's been a significant uptick in student adoption of it. I'm thinking about formally incorporating it into my Finishing and Effects class at BU. I'm leaning toward using it for color and DI functionality only this semester. I like the Deliver features in it as well. Students have the same pain points as the rest of us... getting a file where it needs to go in the right format is an elusive skill.
Got to hand it to Blackmagic. Their freemium strategy really works with students. I hardly meet a film student in any program not familiar with Resolve.
On Thursday, July 14, 2016 2:18 PM, "switthaus@mac.com [Avid-L2]" <Avid-L2@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
Hey Frank -
I guess for me, I consider myself and editor first who can do a bit of color and sound as needed. And for that kind of thing, I can stay in X. If it is a heavy duty color gig that is needed, I go to a colorist (who is probably using Resolve and a real live control surface) and let him/her do what he/she does best.
So I have Resolve on my system (along with all the other "A's") but it is probably last on the list as an editor and any color I need to do personally can be covered with X and/or Color Finale. More than that goes to Resolve as a color correction system.
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Posted by: Frank Capria <frankcapria@yahoo.com>
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this is the Avid-L2
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