![]() Smartphone Read trusted reviews on the latest smart phones from Apple, Samsung, Google and many more.PC & Peripheral All you need to know on the latest PC releases and whether they’re worth their dime.From consoles to RPGS and shooters, we’ve got it all here just waiting for you to read. Gaming Let expert reviewers guide you on which games to play.Gadgets & Smart Home Whether it’s a drone, a smart vacuum or noise cancelling headphones you are looking to buy, our reviewers have tried and tested it before you have to.Entertainment We spend hours watching and reviewing the latest movies, shows and music releases so you don’t have to.Car Our revheads bring you all you need to know on the coolest electric vehicles and sports cars available on the market. ![]() Camera Here you’ll find expert opinions on the latest cameras from Canon, Nikon, Sony and plenty more.† By the way, the Anker unit I named has crap support for SD and MicroSD cards: the sockets are missing the additional contacts for high-speed transfer of files from camera memory cards. So, if you haven’t the budget for the well-regarded CalDigit Thunderbolt hub, at least try to get one *AND CABLES* with USB 3.1 Gen 2 support (10 Gbps) like my Anker unit, or the newer USB3.2Gen2x2 (20 Gbps) standard, if you can even find the latter. There’s a good Wikipedia page about USB 3.0, which describes all this. Point of information about hubs and drives and cables and such: the latest standard (actually September 2017 but only being implemented more widely now) is USB3.2Gen2x2, which provides 20 Gbps transfer speed, which is half way to the 40 Gbps speed of USB-C 3 and USB-C 4, also known as Thunderbolt. ![]() So, any old USB keyboard works fine one doesn’t have to spend crazy money for a dedicated iPad keyboard.įYI the only such USB-A to USB-C adapter I could find at BestBuy was seriously out-of-date and only supports USB2 speeds, to no good for fast data transfer but OK for keyboards and such. Just now though, I’ve plugged it in through a tiny USB-A to USB-C adapter than came with my Wavlink dual Hard Drive Docking Station and this is working just the same… but without the simultaneous power, UHD monitor and other ports. I usually have this ancient keyboard plugged in via my †“Anker PowerExpand 8-in-1 USB-C PD 10Gbps Data Hub” (of which USB 3.1 Gen 2 support is what gives it the 10 Gbps speed). If so, you could try the modifier keys on the other side of the spacebar from the ones you normally use, to see if that makes a difference. If you have a full-sized Apple Extended keyboard (from an old iMac) such as I use, or a Logitech or other 3rd-party keyboard with all those keys, you’ll have a double set of Command and Option keys: one of each on each side of the Space bar. ![]() ![]() I also added one for Preferences: I have no idea how one is supposed to get to that page through the regular graphical user interface.Īs you will discover, the icons for the additional pages don’t stay stuck to the bottom of your screen between launches of Resolve: you need to invoke them with your keyboard shortcut(s) with each launch of the Resolve app. So, in addition to the standard Cut and Color Pages, I also added shortcuts for Edit, Fairlight, Fusion, Deliver, and Media pages. Command-Option-K access to shortcuts is still working for me here with Resolve for iPad 18.1.3, though honestly I don’t use it often after setting up shortcuts to all the pages and keeping a “cheat sheet” of what they are. ![]()
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