hrbaban Posted May 6, 2008 Posted May 6, 2008 Hi . . .I am a graphicist who design with photoshop .Now , i want to buy a PC for myself but i don`t know which hardware configuration do i buy ?
puntoMX Posted May 7, 2008 Posted May 7, 2008 Hi there,What size of graphics are you talking about? I do some 1 by 2.2 meter 300dpi printout designs with a few layers myself, that hog up more than 2GB, so how about you?
nmX.Memnoch Posted May 7, 2008 Posted May 7, 2008 RAM, RAM and more RAM, a couple of fast drives RAID0'd for the scratch disk, and a 64-bit OS. CS4 is finally supposed to get native x64 binaries (under Windows only, Mac users will have to wait until CS5).http://blogs.adobe.com/jnack/2008/04/photoshop_lr_64.html
suryad Posted May 7, 2008 Posted May 7, 2008 RAM, RAM and more RAM, a couple of fast drives RAID0'd for the scratch disk, and a 64-bit OS. CS4 is finally supposed to get native x64 binaries (under Windows only, Mac users will have to wait until CS5).http://blogs.adobe.com/jnack/2008/04/photoshop_lr_64.htmlAgree wholeheartedly with that post.
hrbaban Posted May 8, 2008 Author Posted May 8, 2008 My design is large format , for example (400 x 1000)cm or (200 x 2000)cm . . . . . . I want that rendering be fast no slow . In other word , when i use free transform from edit menu in photoshop for changing size of photo rendering be fast .I want saving file in photoshop be fast .In other word , speed in designing is my purpose or idea .H.D.D is effective in designing ? (please explain )
Kelsenellenelvian Posted May 8, 2008 Posted May 8, 2008 The modern harddrive is the main bottleneck of todays computers. They are SLOW compared to all the rest of the hardware. I would go for a couple of 300 gig raptors (10,000 rpm) in raid. The speed increase will be enormous.
Viscon Posted May 8, 2008 Posted May 8, 2008 agree that you need as much RAM as your mobo and OS can handle.and make sure it's dual channel.also dual or quad core CPU helps a lot while working with big files.
nmX.Memnoch Posted May 8, 2008 Posted May 8, 2008 What's your overall budget for this build? If you really want the ultimate setup then start looking at SAS drives instead of SATA. Those can be purchased at up to 15,000 RPM. You'll pay a price premium for it though (and you'll have to get a SAS controller as well), but that's the only way you're going to get the absolute best configuration.
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