I am about to try the RedHat developer edition at this point since it appears Resolve will run on RedHat as well.īut for my editing needs/wants, is there a reason to switch? I mean, I am fine working in Windows or Linux. I suspect there is some way to get it to boot in to CentOS. I also ask this because I recently bought a desktop replacement laptop, that I run Windows 10 on as well, and have been trying to set up as a dual boot CentOS setup, to no avail. is the OpenCL implementation for a Linux GPU like the new 1070/1080 or AMDs offerings as good, or better than what is possible on a Windows box? However, it seems like just from various reads around the net, there is a severe limitation on the hardware capabilities of Linux. So I know it is fresh off the release and this may be too early to provide any concrete information, but I am really wondering if the Linux version of Resolve, with the known hardware limitations, is any faster, better, etc to use than the Windows and/or Mac counterpart? I would love to be able to use my same beastly development box to edit videos and such with as well. editing, capturing, recording, etc), and video gaming. I have kept a windows machine around for two reasons. That said, I was ecstatic to see Resolve released for Linux, if only for Redhat/CentOS, but it seems others are finding ways with some manual intervention to get it to work on other flavors, at least to some degree. I am well aware of ALSA, Jack, and proprietary drivers for GPUs, etc. I have found it difficult, at best to get Linux to work as smooth and more so, as fast, as a Windows or Mac setup. When it comes to anything that uses hardware, however, such as GPUs, audio cards (internal or USB), etc. Love using it for development as it is rock solid and at least to me, faster to develop with. So I am a long time Ubuntu/Linux user, software developer, etc.
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