Just like it is easy to edit on the iPad. I did try your answer as well, but that wasnt it.Īs you say its still choppy but at least was visible so I could work out proxies etc if I needed to.īy next year many video cards will support it and it will be easy to edit. Nvidia doesnt seem to make any difference but it still worked at least. Thanks for this and all your other help, as I said above it turned out to be turning off Intel GPU acceleration in Resolve, it seems to go down a rabbit hole when that was enabled. choppy playback would still be a case unless your computer is powerful enough Can you check the Path it shows in Media tab, and whether files actually exist there (specially if its a removable drive, or files have been renamed / moved)Īll this is just about Resolve identifying and opening the file.
Media Offline means you have something in the media pool which no longer exists at the path it points to.
It instead detected the files as Audio Tracks Resolve free did not open 10 bit CLOG files - but it never said media offline. Resolve Studio should open all R5 recording formats.
Try them out with the compatible software and decent graphics card The Fuji, Panasonic and Sony hevc files are easier to work with. Don’t know about Vegas but Davinci Resolve Studio 16 supports HEVC files with hardware acceleration Besides, I think its the nature of H265 that some initial part of decode is anyway CPU heavy even when GPU support is available (i may we wrong on this one though) I probably see the same with my RX580 for the decode phase on Mac (high CPU usage). Ideally, Main 4:4:4 10 profile should support Main 4:2:2 10, but there are multiple reports that it doesn't on nvidia GPUs at least. Here is the nvidia matrix for up to 20 series GPUs smooth playback - depends on speed of computer.
software support for 10 bit 4:2:2 hevc - depends on software in use.Higher bitrate means the CPU having to do more, so compared to a lower bitrate output for same codec, lower end systems will struggle canon files much sooner than their powerful counterparts Without help from the GPU, it squarely falls onto the CPU, and the bitrate comes into play. But Canon isn’t the only manufacturer offering 10 bit 4:2:2 hevc and videos from the competitors don’t struggle rendering or playing.