![]() The way its built and its relation to OSX makes it a very capable and unique editing tool, great for many projects. The reason I didn't mention FCPX is that its hard to compare it to anything but itself. ![]() It was a good NLE, and there are times where Resolve (as an NLE) feels like the FCP8 (or FCP9 if 12 was 8 ) we never got from Apple. I like how Resolve adopted many things from RIP FCP7 (some extremely subtle I truly enjoyed discovering). This hardly happens with Avid editors for example, probably one of the reasons why still, so many things that matter are cut on good-ol' Avid. ![]() So many of them react like they weren't aware of the existence of a deeper layer of editing, and of the revolution trim tools made in film/content creation history. I keep getting "Wows" in Sessions where I teach experienced PP editors advance timeline techniques and advance trim editing. PP's biggest editing bug is still the average PP users and the click-drag-move technique they mainly implement, instead of adopting deeper, more advance and complex editing techniques which the system today is capable of (and has been for a while. I can't think of many crucial editing related bugs it currently suffers from (better media manger/transcoding features are just borderline editing).įrom my POV. But to be fair, Premiere as an editing tool has become quite impressive in my opinion. I'm not sure which bugs are chasing you away from PP. On the other hand, since Resolve is a veteran Online tool, it deals nicely with large timelines and is a quite full, very accurate and fairly stable video tool. But BMD is doing a great job at tracking and eliminating these and every update fixes more of them. You can sometime feel it when doing extensive timeline work (glitches, sub-frame gaps, actions that kill-crash the app etc'). PP's trim tool has evolved nicely, Avid's of course is near perfect.Īnother point has to do with the overall stability of a system that has undergone huge changes, like Resolve did in past few years. This can be worked around but is definitely missing if heavy duty trim sessions are planned. The main one and most prominent would be the lack of a dedicated Trim setup/window/tool (A/B sides, frame counter etc'). The short answer would be My opinion is super positive and that they compare fairly well with both.īit longer one is I can't think of that many essential editing features in PP that aren't in Resolve. In regards to your question about Resolve's editing tools and how they compare to FCPX or PP (funny you didn't mention Avid.) I have yet to get some more time in it in order to make that assessment. Just out of curiousity, what's your opinion on the editing portion of Davinci in comparison to premiere or final cut? I'm running away from Premiere because of all its unsolvable bugs on my computer, and I'm a little worried the grass might not be greener on the other side. Seems good so far.Ĭorey Wipper wrote:Thanks Hector! That's actually what I've been doing. ![]() Thanks Hector! That's actually what I've been doing. My recommendation to you is to learn a tool with its native shortcuts, then slowly customize them as you go, rather than start by remapping everything to what you were used to before. And part of discovering a software is discovering its shortcuts. Part of switching is in switching your keyboard shortcut mindset. Other systems also offer presets for switchers, and always some shortcuts transition well while others don't, as no 2 systems are exactly alike. I've trained several teams of editors (TV channels, post facilities and other) switching from one system to another over the years, and countless individuals (Avid to FCP7, FCP7 to PP, Avid to PP and lately, everything to Resolve) Is this happening for everyone, and if so, does anyone have a keyboard shortcut file they could export to me that they created using Premiere's shortcuts?. I've even tried doing them all custom, but I still run into problems getting things to work properly. Corey Wipper wrote: When I switch the Keyboard Mapping to Premiere in the settings, very few of them are correct.
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