mastodon.world is one of the many independent Mastodon servers you can use to participate in the fediverse.
Generic Mastodon server for anyone to use.

Server stats:

8.4K
active users

#resolve

0 posts0 participants0 posts today

Not a fan of the concept of #Resolve using a database compared to other programs like Kdenlive and Premiere just having files loose wherever you want to put them. This, in effect, makes it so it's harder for me to backup my project files and I can't just have a program like dotbakker to copy the file and add dot bak and a number according to how many copies of that file are in that folder. Before writing that, I would manually copy, paste, and rename files.

OpenFX (OFX) refers to an open standard for creating and using visual effects (VFX) and compositing plug-ins. It is a way for developers to create plug-ins that can be used across multiple applications. Two popular Linux applications that support OpenFX are DaVinci Resolve and Natron.

#Linux#OpenFX#OFX
Replied in thread

@eugenialoli
Yes @darktable has 16bit but on some raw formats it does not seem to work and the color profiles handling seems to be completely broken. At least all my RAW images do not look like they should with the correct color profiles.

Yes gimp got slightly better with the GTK3 release, but the UX is still unintuitive, even compared to Photoshop that is also bad TBH, I regularly see new people using it and stuff is just also not working like a modern user think they would work. I still don’t find an option to mask non destructive filters and I always thought that this is one of the most important feature for non-destructive filter layers.

Your resolve claim is simply not true, and I see it everywhere. There is a Github repo packaging it as Flatpak, and it works with Nvidia, there could be a ROCM Flatpak runtime extension for the Freedesktop runtime. This is also a project on Github that once even worked with the resolve Flatpak build. But ROCM is broken as fuck, #blackmagic should give us a Vulcan option for #resolve on Linux.

Continued thread

Not only that, but once you install the software, it requires access to your networks, your photo library, your location, and all sorts of other things. It seems to me that in addition to taking your money, it's also going to take your private data. How do I know that it's not going to take photos out of my photo library and use them for something else?

There has to be a better solution. I'm wondering if d#DaVinci can handle these files. 🤔