I'm a colorist working with Resolve professionaly on large projects for over a decade.<p>The pro editing world working on six, seven, and eight figure projects (I don't do studio blockbusters) is currently 75% premiere, 19% avid, 5% FCP hold outs (usually stubborn Oscar winning editors), and <1% Resolve. I've worked with one single editor cutting in Resolve in the past 18 months (approximately 200 projects ranging from global ad campaigns, to narrative tv and film, to major music videos).<p>The amateur and digital only world (YouTube) are the ones switching primarily because Resolve is cheap or free (depending on your needs). No one wants to subscribe to Adobe, Premiere crashes too much, Avid is too confusing for this audience (who don't need the professional workplace features), and the new FCP is a joke. Vegas was popular on the ultra low end for a while but it's just lacking too many features.<p>No one really cares about Resolve running Linux outside of ultra high end color suites and tech guys dabbling in video.
For me it came down to a single, simple factor. Pricing.<p>I bought a perpetual license for Resolve Studio for $295. Premiere Pro costs $21/mo., in perpetuity. So over even a relatively short time horizon of 2 years, my costs of ownership for Resolve Studio is still $295, but Premiere would cost me $504, and would keep costing me more and more money forever, likely at an increasing rate, as Adobe loves jacking up the monthly prices of their "Services" without actually improving the product.<p>Bottom line for me is I LOATHE software subscriptions, and will happily spend more to actually own the software I use, though in this case Resolve is actually CHEAPER to own, so it's a win-win for me, and a mounting loss for Adobe with no end in sight, as they're never going back to perpetual licenses as they've gotten fat and lazy suckling on the teat of "Recurring revenue" and are motivated by greed and short term profit above all else.
I'm a programmer who picked up video-editing 2 years ago, and I used DaVinci because it was free, but damn, these video editors are powerful beasts. And there's so much to learn.<p>You can even remote-control DaVinci from Python (if only there was a Javascript library available), and edit videos programmatically. Mind blown.
For me the move was because Vegas licensing was a pain. Despite having paid I couldn't get it working on a second PC, and I didn't want to pay for every new version. (I had gotten it during a humble sale.)<p>Resolve was no cost and did all I needed. Albeit if quirky and picky about input formats.
Let me add one big reason to the list: lots of TV broadcasting equipment is Linux-based.<p>And on Linux, Resolve is like the only good option. Final Cut and Premiere simply don't work there.
how has kdenlive come up in the last year? i remember reading reviews and frustrations from users about losing data from crashes but the team has been pretty active viz fixing bugs so has anyone tested it very recently and is it better or worse?<p>how is it compared to its paid competition?
Reminded me to check out Natron to see if it was still moving along. It's branded as a video compositor. Might be worth playing with them both again.<p><a href="https://github.com/NatronGitHub/Natron">https://github.com/NatronGitHub/Natron</a>
> The Speed Editor costs $295 and comes with a Resolve Studio license, making it worth the cost even if you barely use it.<p>You can even flip it on ebay and recoup most of the program licensing costs!(if they allow you to separate the program license from the hardware)