
Plus, with the iMac / Pros you're paying a huge premium for a craptastic screen that isn't really suitable for colour work.The BLACKMAGIC Fairlight Console is new. A considerably more powerful Intel hackintosh (if full out of the box compatibility is your priority) for between 1/4 & 1/5 of the price. You can build a vastly more powerful AMD hackintosh for 1/6 of the price.

The all core advertised clock of the 18 core ($7400) is a pathetic 2.3Ghz, and in practice under sustained load it often falls a lot further.

and cooling is such an issue due to the SFF / AIO nature that both headline and advertised clock speeds are really low. But resulting product is hideously overpriced. Only the iMac Pro uses desktop workstation class chips - Xeon W. The Mini has a low power laptop chip, and the iMac range have higher power laptop chips - hence the 'Mobile' branding on both. They're severely underpowered for the kind of work that's being talked about. Neither of you know what you're talking about. B&H currently has it available for pre-order, but it's priced at $1,025. Blackmagic has also included a dedicated numpad section for direct timecode entry.īlackmagic Design says the DaVinci Resolve Editor Keyboard is set to ship in August for $995 USD through authorized retailers. When paired with the oversized in/out and source/timeline keys, the control dial makes it easy to cull through footage and get it its place faster than ever. The DaVinci Resolve Editor Keyboard also includes a search control dial that accurately scrubs through footage. The keys are tiered and set on top of mechanical switches for a more tactile feel and although the keys and switches are rated for millions of clicks, each switch and key is user-replaceable in the event something breaks over time.Ī single USB-C port on the back of the board is used to connect it to its accompanying hardware, but Blackmagic Design has also included two additional USB 3.0 ports on the rear of the keyboard for additional accessories.

The keyboard is constructed of a metal frame with a revised QWERTY layout that's pre-programmed to speed up the most-used tools and features inside DaVinci Resolve. Blackmagic has announced the DaVinci Resolve Editor Keyboard, a new console-inspired keyboard designed specifically to improve video editing workflows inside DaVinci Resolve.
