Looking at getting a new PC after xmas.
I shoot a lot of raw, what would you recommend as the minimum requirements for the new specs...
2x1TB HDD in a RAID array ( not as fast as SSD but a damn sight cheaper ).
RAID0/striping? I'm assuming so if speed was the reason for doing it. I hope you're backed up, as you've just doubled your chances of disk failure.
religious backup, automatic daily to external HDD with weekly offsite storage
RAID0/striping? I'm assuming so if speed was the reason for doing it. I hope you're backed up, as you've just doubled your chances of disk failure.
religious backup, automatic daily to external HDD with weekly offsite storage
Good man!![]()
It depends on the HDMI implementation on the monitor and the quality of the panel.I'm looking at using a full HD 32" as a monitor through hdmi for the time being how will that work?
8-16gb of RAM.
i5 or if flush i7 processor
I'd also get a 256 or 360gb SSD for the operating system and programmes and a 1 or 2 TB drive for actual photo and video storage. The SSD will massively improve performance.
Make sure you get a decent screen and calibrator as well.
Windows 7 64 bit (really try to avoid windows 8 - its terrible as a non touchscreen desktop UI).
I wouldn't waste twice the money on a mac of similar spec.
OK.Would love to see a PC built with the same spec as a iMac for £800![]()
Studi0488 said:Would love to see a PC built with the same spec as a iMac for £800![]()
Ahahahahaha....I bet your not that for off being comparably priced![]()
Aside from all this arguing about the price of iMacs, the main reason not to get one would be the screen. iMac screens are completely unsuitable for editing. The matte cinema displays they used to do (not sure if they still do them) were pretty good though. This is an unbiased opinion, I am currently posting this from my mac.... However I would never dream of doing any serious kind of editing on here.
No you don't. After market coolers maybe, but not water cooling....1 - noise, PC, especially a powerful one is loud, to get iMac silent you need watercooled
RAID0/striping? I'm assuming so if speed was the reason for doing it.
Aside from all this arguing about the price of iMacs, the main reason not to get one would be the screen. iMac screens are completely unsuitable for editing. The matte cinema displays they used to do (not sure if they still do them) were pretty good though. This is an unbiased opinion, I am currently posting this from my mac.... However I would never dream of doing any serious kind of editing on here.
Aside from all this arguing about the price of iMacs, the main reason not to get one would be the screen. iMac screens are completely unsuitable for editing. The matte cinema displays they used to do (not sure if they still do them) were pretty good though. This is an unbiased opinion, I am currently posting this from my mac.... However I would never dream of doing any serious kind of editing on here.
It can be a bit of both. I have a (now superceded) Spyder 3 which lets you tell it which picture control functions you have on your monitor. You adjust those to get it close to the ideal brightness and white balance and then the program takes 10 minutes to go over a variety or red, green and blue patterns which are measured.The only use would be for photos and net. I don't do PC gaming. My photos are just soured on the hdd of my current PC. But I'm starting to so more and more, another reason for upgrade. Although I do have external hdd if need be.
Any recommendations on calibrators? Do these adjust the output from the PC so you don't have to rely on adjusting options on the monitor/HD TV.?
Ahahahahaha....
I took the best value iMac they do and still beat the price by 1/3rd (if you want BT and wifi, add another £20-£30 to the motherboard). Take any one of the other macs and I'd get close to 1/2 the price for pretty much the same spec. in about 20 minutes (which was all I spent on the above)....
If I were you at this point, I'd stop trying to justify it and say, yes, the Mac is more expensive, but there are other intangibles it has which some find valuable and are willing to pay for. It doesn't, however, make it the ultimate value package for everyone![]()
tfboy said:It can be a bit of both. I have a (now superceded) Spyder 3 which lets you tell it which picture control functions you have on your monitor. You adjust those to get it close to the ideal brightness and white balance and then the program takes 10 minutes to go over a variety or red, green and blue patterns which are measured.
Once done, it writes a colour profile to the graphics card which "compensates" the RGB values to give you a truer picture.
No. You need a new calculatorYou need a new calculator, best 27in is £1500 yours is £1100 and you conveniently left off the warranty, build time, mouse, which would easiyl be a couple,of hundred quid, so at a squeeze like for like your PC is £200 cheaper, at best......
If you really want OSX on the cheap, build yourself a hackintosh. Much cheaper. So much cheaper in fact that no calculators are required but some serious tinkering is! and is totally unsupported of course![]()