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#11
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which PC
mogh baba wrote:
hi, I have a question which I hope someone can give me e good answer. Recently, my computer died and the serviceman says the usual word: You do not win by repairing this and it is better to get a new pc. the only sertiouse requirement I have from a new pc is that it is good for working with digital RAW files. The specifications suggests that the new computer with 250 G HDD and 1024 ram and an Intel Core 2 duo 2.0 desktop seems to be good enough for me. My only question is about the integrated garaphic card. the seller says it is very good and if i want to get a seperated card it will cost me more than 150 US dollar. shall I go for the integrated card or get a seperate one? Shall I think about other specifications? The integrated card is called: "onboard Intel GMa3000 256mb". I hope I have given enough information. best regards, Mojtaba 1. Two hard drives (one specifically for Photoshop scratch drive...second drive can be smaller). 2. As much RAM as it allows (minimum 2GB, better at 4GB). 3. Dual core helps a lot...especially for programs designed to take advantage of it (photoshop). 4. If you can, get a machine with XP Pro instead of Vista. Vista is still a royal waste of system resources/speed. 5. If you're using a flat panel, make sure it can accept a digital signal, and get a card with DVI outs. 6. If you don't have one...spend another $130 on a Spyder2 colorometer. MarkČ -- Images (Plus Snaps & Grabs) by MarkČ at: www.pbase.com/markuson |
#12
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"Randall Ainsworth" wrote in message ... In article , M-M wrote: Macintosh, of course! ALRIGHT! Someone with a clue! Yes.. Apple.. they know how to exploit style over function. Style makes money while you have to work harder with function. I bet that if Apple took PC and put a logo and a white case on it you would say it was the best PC ever. Hang on that's what they have done. |
#13
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mogh baba wrote:
hi, I have a question which I hope someone can give me e good answer. Recently, my computer died and the serviceman says the usual word: You do not win by repairing this and it is better to get a new pc. the only sertiouse requirement I have from a new pc is that it is good for working with digital RAW files. The specifications suggests that the new computer with 250 G HDD and 1024 ram and an Intel Core 2 duo 2.0 desktop seems to be good enough for me. My only question is about the integrated garaphic card. the seller says it is very good and if i want to get a seperated card it will cost me more than 150 US dollar. shall I go for the integrated card or get a seperate one? Shall I think about other specifications? The integrated card is called: "onboard Intel GMa3000 256mb". I hope I have given enough information. best regards, Mojtaba ONly a couple of suggestions. First, get the best monitor you afford as the monitor IS what you see. Second, get as much ram as your computer will allow. This will make everything run faster, and will allow your photo editing software to run most efficiently. 1GB is NOT enough for heavy photo editing! Unless you really want to do gaming, having the top of the line video adapter is NOT necessary. If you have a good LCD display, make sure it, and the computer both have the ability to handle digital video. |
#14
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In article , mogh baba
wrote: hi, I have a question which I hope someone can give me e good answer. Recently, my computer died and the serviceman says the usual word: You do not win by repairing this and it is better to get a new pc. the only sertiouse requirement I have from a new pc is that it is good for working with digital RAW files. Consider a Mac; there are several models to look at. With a Mac, you get Apple's world class customer service, tops in user friendliness, tops in reliability, and the ability to run all Windows and Mac software. Out of the box, the Mac will come with a very good tool to work with photos. |
#15
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which PC
In article ,
"dennis@home" wrote: "Randall Ainsworth" wrote in message ... In article , M-M wrote: Macintosh, of course! ALRIGHT! Someone with a clue! Yes.. Apple.. they know how to exploit style over function. Style makes money while you have to work harder with function. I bet that if Apple took PC and put a logo and a white case on it you would say it was the best PC ever. Hang on that's what they have done. Not true at all. Try the latest Macs with Photoshop and see for yourself or just check out iPhoto 6, which is great for the typical amateur photographer. I use Macs and Windows XP daily. Mac OS X runs rings around Windows for functionality, reliability, and ease of use, plus I spend a lot less time doing maintenance stuff such as installing OS updates and no security issues. |
#16
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Agreed
Separate graphics card is not necessary for 2D work. Only exceptions are people who want to play 3D games and/or do 3D modelling. One other possibility is if you want to Multi-monitor and the onboard only has one output. "dmaster" wrote in message s.com... On Jun 5, 12:22 pm, "just bob" kilbyfan@aoldotcom wrote: "Dave Cohen" wrote in message news:xCe9i.6892$My4.6842@trndny05... Allen wrote: dennis@home wrote: mogh baba wrote in message ... hi, I have a question which I hope someone can give me e good answer. Recently, my computer died and the serviceman says the usual word: You do not win by repairing this and it is better to get a new pc. the only sertiouse requirement I have from a new pc is that it is good for working with digital RAW files. The specifications suggests that the new computer with 250 G HDD and 1024 ram and an Intel Core 2 duo 2.0 desktop seems to be good enough for me. My only question is about the integrated garaphic card. the seller says it is very good and if i want to get a seperated card it will cost me more than 150 US dollar. shall I go for the integrated card or get a seperate one? Shall I think about other specifications? The integrated card is called: "onboard Intel GMa3000 256mb". If its just normal photo editing then integrated graphics should work fine. Its 3D games performance that you pay extra for. You may want more RAM you never have enough IME. Make sure you get a good monitor. You need to be able to see what you are editing. If expense is not a problem have a look at a tablet PC.. they are notebooks but they have a full screen graphics tablet built in. Make sure you get one with a Wacom compatible screen as some of the newer low cost ones just have a touch screen and not a graphics tablet. If it only works with the supplied stylus it should be a wacom. If it works with your finger nail its not. You may still want a monitor but they all support that AFAIK. Assuming that you are looking at an IBM-type new PC, it will almost certainly come with Windows VISTA installed, so your first requirement should be at least 2064 Mb of RAM. Also, you should investigate the cost of adding a second HD of at least 250 Gb or larger. Especially in the case of memory it is cheaper to get these things as part of a new machine. Allen I agree with the RAM statement, it's reasonably cheap and more can never hurt. However, I would consider an external hd as an alternative to a 2nd internal. The machine is otherwise ok assuming it includes a good 19" or better monitor. Dave Cohen I would get a 512MB video card or the 256MB video card, minimum.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Given that the O.P.'s intent was photo work, why? He's not going to be swapping large texture files or doing anything else that might take advantage of even a fraction of the video memory. Nor is he planning to run any intense 3D games that might make use of the GPU that is presumably on the "512MB video card" you recommend. And if you changes his mind and wants a capable game card, then I'd suggest picking a good GPU since that's probably going to be way more important than the difference between 512MB and 256MB of video memory. Dan (Woj...) |
#17
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In article , "dennis@home" wrote:
Yes.. Apple.. they know how to exploit style over function. Style makes money while you have to work harder with function. I bet that if Apple took PC and put a logo and a white case on it you would say it was the best PC ever. Hang on that's what they have done. Have fun with your virus-ridden, bloated OS. |
#18
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"Shawn Hirn" wrote in message ... Not true at all. Try the latest Macs with Photoshop and see for yourself or just check out iPhoto 6, which is great for the typical amateur photographer. I use Macs and Windows XP daily. Mac OS X runs rings around Windows for functionality, reliability, and ease of use, plus I spend a lot less time doing maintenance stuff such as installing OS updates and no security issues. Do you want to look at that in detail? Mac OS X has less functionality than Vista (not that it matters to me as I run applications and not OSes as such). OS updates for windows install themselves and what's more they are free and don't cost $150 pa when a new "version" arrives. There are security issues on Macs if you haven't been patching them you are asking for trouble. Oh the hardware in Macs is as close to a PC as you can get too. Just as well really as Mac performance was getting very slow compared to PCs. You can even buy a two or three button mouse for a Mac to make it useable. PS what *idiot* invented a circular mouse for a Mac? |
#19
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which PC
"Randall Ainsworth" wrote in message ... In article , "dennis@home" wrote: Yes.. Apple.. they know how to exploit style over function. Style makes money while you have to work harder with function. I bet that if Apple took PC and put a logo and a white case on it you would say it was the best PC ever. Hang on that's what they have done. Have fun with your virus-ridden, bloated OS. Which one? I use at least five (and none have a virus). |
#20
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In article , Shawn
Hirn wrote: Consider a Mac; there are several models to look at. With a Mac, you get Apple's world class customer service, tops in user friendliness, tops in reliability, and the ability to run all Windows and Mac software. Out of the box, the Mac will come with a very good tool to work with photos. What he said. For the most part, you're using application software like Photoshop, so re-learning your applications isn't an issue; in fact re-buying it may not be either. Adobe offers an exchange where you can swap your software for the Mac versions for just a few dollars. And as stated, if for some reason you need specific Windows apps or even want to go back to Windows entirely, you can keep the Macintosh hardware. I know a few people who've bought high end Macs specifically to run Windows because THEY WERE A BETTER VALUE. While Apple refuses to compete in the bottom end of the market, their better computers are actually cheaper than an equivalent PC. So, it's cheaper, better made, better supported, may not require retraining or repurchasing software, and will run virtually anything out there - Windows, OSX, Linux... Seems like an easy choice. |
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