DiddyDave said:Having a pc built to similar/better spec instead - but it'd have to be half the price to be worth it
DD
Go Sandy Bridge now if you're self-building. Just about to do this and putting together mobo/16G/90G OCZ SSD/heatsink/i7-2600k (which appears faster than any "older" i7 - even the triple channel ones - and very easy to overclock) is coming in around £750. You'd need a case/power supply/optical drive (already have these) but you could go 8G memory and get those instead. If you wanted hard drive rather than SSD, that's going to lower the cost too..I spec'd up an i7 with 12gb for 740 odd I think it was the other day on here if that's any use to you?
TBH, if you have a decent monitor, I'd go PC (the PC/Mac debate basically boils down to the software just presenting things differently - they are the same underlying hardware so...) as things are cheaper to upgrade incrementally with a PC. If you want some advice on what they are suggesting/configs/whether prices are right etc, either post in here somewhere or drop me a PM.
Go Sandy Bridge now if you're self-building. Just about to do this and putting together mobo/16G/90G OCZ SSD/heatsink/i7-2600k (which appears faster than any "older" i7 - even the triple channel ones - and very easy to overclock) is coming in around £750. You'd need a case/power supply/optical drive (already have these) but you could go 8G memory and get those instead. If you wanted hard drive rather than SSD, that's going to lower the cost too..
That lot will be a fair bit more powerful than the top end iMac (with i7 in).
The iMac comes with a monitor, so it depends if your current monitor is any good. It would probably cost £600-£700 to get a 27" iMac equivalent monitor.
me said:Intel Core i7 950 Bloomfield 45nm, 3.06 GHz, QPI 4.8GT/s, 8MB Cache, 23x Ratio, 130W, Retail
1TB Samsung HD103SJ Spinpoint F3, SATA 3Gb/s, 7200rpm, 32MB Cache, 8.9 ms, NCQ, OEM
Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium 64 Bit, Operating System, Single, - OEM
Samsung SH-S223C/BEBE 22x DVD±R, 12x DVD±R, DVD+RW x8/-RW x6, SATA, Black, OEM
Coolermaster Elite 334 Black Midi Tower Case w/o PSU
1GB Asus HD5570, PCI-E 2.1 (x16), 1600MHz GDDR3, 650MHz GPU, 400 Cores, D-Sub/DVI-I/HDMI
Gigabyte GA-X58-USB3, Intel X58, S1366, PCI-E 2.0 (x16), DDR3 1066/1333/2200, SATA 3Gb/s RAID, ATX
500W Silverstone ST50F-P, Strider Silent, 100% modular, 80 Plus Bronze PSU
12GB (3x4GB) Corsair XMS3, DDR3 PC3-10666 (1333) Non-ECC Unbuffered, CAS 9-9-9-24, 1.5V
all scan prices = £622.64 ex VAT and ex carriage.. obviously you could get that down a bit more by dropping to 6gb and getting a different graphics card, i think my 4550 cost less and has twin DVI for example
DD
I have my "old" 24" monitor set up as a second monitor with my iMac.
Works great with Lightroom. I have the grid view on the Mac and Loupe selected on the secondary. Makes selection a lot quicker.
Plus you can swap them around when using the develop module, put the grid up on the second monitor .
You'll need a an adapter to connect the output from the Mac to the second monitor, but they are only about £25 from Apple
You can calibrate both of them independently, without any problem
Another point about a second monitor, If you have it calibrated and it's a good match the the iMac you can have a reference image on the second machine. This helps if you need a consistent colour match across a range of images.
The 'We build you a pc' boys haven't replied to my enquiry in 4 days - which I think is **** poor of them, and I 'fell over' nearly £500 unexpectedly - so the iMac is now front runner![]()
who out of interest?
hell, slip me some cash and i'll build one for you lol
Are you VAT reg and able to offer a warranty ???
And these were recommended to me, looked good too as they are close enough to drop in (which I offered to do) http://www.pcspecialist.co.uk/ seems they are too busy to contact anyone who emails them :shrug:
DD

to be honest ive never heard of them. but then i build my own so ive never really looked too hard.
have you tried calling them? even warehouse express take days to reply to email on occasion.
VAT - no but was thinking about it lol
warrenty - well i am on here a lot...![]()
I've been struggling by on a MacBook Pro with 4GB RAM for the past year, works fine for Lightroom and PS but gets a bit bogged down if things like safari are open as well, or if I'm doing anything extensive with adjustment brushes. I just took delivery of an i3 27 inch iMac this week with 8GB RAM and between LR and PS, it absolutely flies. My editing time has literally been cut in half it's that quick.
Have you thought about leasing? I lease mine, 3 year agreement but every 18 months I can renew the agreement for another 3 years, get a new, up to date machine and keep the current machine with which I can do as I please. I know that Hugh (boyfalldown) uses the same firm.
i7 would have more of an impact than 512mb graphics memory
DD
My 12 month old Imac i5 has the 4850 Radeon. No problem with either Lightroom or Photoshop. I'd opt for a memory upgrade to 8 Gb as the rule of thumb seems to be 2Gb per core.
Check Apple memory price against Crucial.
John C

Not too dissimilar from the advice I got from the Apple store when I bought mine, plus the guy there also mentioned Crucial. I went for 2 x 2Gb sticks as they were a much cheaper option and I couldn't see the advantages of 12Gb. My MacBook Pro only has 4Gb and that handles 1Dslll files reasonably quickly.
As they say in the Lightroom 5 Rules... Enjoy![]()
I use an Imac 21" 3.06 for everything you're using and to be honest its a perfectly decent machine. I have been a mac user for over 12 years and have gotten used to the high prices lol!
If you're planning on doing colour critical work on your imac, I will warn you the screen tends to be bit of a pain to calibrate properly. There's some good guides out there however.
The stock calibration on mine was actually pretty good. I work in a small indie photo processing lab and printed some stuff straight out of photoshop on our wet lab and the colours were almost spot on.
Maybe I just got lucky with my screen who knows?
Oh and one other thing your mac will likely come with the Magic Mouse. I don't quite know what Apple were thinking when they designed this mouse but if you dont want a broken wrist after a few hours in photoshop, use your old one or invest in a nice logitech one. Put the Apple mouse with your other ornaments since that's all its good for to be honest.
Enjoy your new mac!![]()
(Should measure around 120-130 cd/m2)Screen should calibrate fine. Initially it will be waaaay to bright. Go to System Prefs and select displays. There is a brightness slider at the bottom of the pane. Move it about half way and you should get a brightness that doesn't burn your eyeballs out(Should measure around 120-130 cd/m2)
Chappers said:There are Trojans out there which may effect Macs but as far as I know there are no serious viruses in the wild. However with Macs becoming more popular then it's probably only a matter of time. Coming from a PC background I am concerned about virus and other malware.
I run iAntivirus as a precaution. McAfee also do a Mac version but iAntivirus is cheaper ( Free for non Business use and not expensive for Business use)
DiddyDave said:Still awaiting my confirmation email
But Lightroom will be my first purchase for it
DD
Yup.. Macs are accounting for all of 7% of installs these days. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Usage_share_of_operating_systems - I do wonder if they all inhabit TP sometimes...stands to reason that as more people use OSX malware rootkit writers will start giving it more attention to get at the users details/cash.
Yup.. Macs are accounting for all of 7% of installs these days. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Usage_share_of_operating_systems - I do wonder if they all inhabit TP sometimes...
That is, unless there are millions of Mac users that haven't discovered the internet yet![]()
![]()
