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Best CPU for video editing?
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Member
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6. February 2006 @ 18:02 |
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I'm looking to get a new computer for video editing. What kind of processor will run the best with Vegas? AMD? Intel D? Celeron? Are there other options that are better? I just need advice on this one thing to help me finish my pc.
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Member
1 product review
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6. February 2006 @ 18:53 |
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Pentium D or if you got the cash Pentium EE(dual core + Hyper Threading)
Most importantly make sure you got at least 2 gig of ram, ram is cheap now days so dont be stingy this is whatll help
Playstation 2 ---- Matrix Infinity
Gamecube --------- Ninja Mod
Xbox 360 --------- Firmware Hack
Xbox-------------- Duo X2
PC---------------- Core 2 Duo e6850, 9800gtx, 4gig ddr2-8500, 780i Vista 64-bit
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AfterDawn Addict
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6. February 2006 @ 19:08 |
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processor type and speed aren't the most important aspects of video editing. you do of course need a good fast one, but more importantly is ram, so get 1 gig MINIMUM, 2 gigs would be best, and make sure to get the fastest ram your mobo supports, with the fastest latency. Next important is a good fast hard drive. Most HDs now are 7200 RPM anyway, but make sure you get one with an 8MB buffer, and the faster the access time the better. If you can afford a 10k RPM drive, get it. You will see quite an improvement in the overall speed of your editing as far as rendering, processing, and storing goes.
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SypherTek
Suspended due to non-functional email address
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6. February 2006 @ 23:43 |
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best CPU for video editing isnt AMD or Intel or any other CPU youd get in a windows based PC.
the best CPUs for video editing by far are the ones you get in a mac
sorry to say it but its true. you just cant beat macs for video and music editing as theyre built for that purpose.
Studio Comp: AMD Athlon XP 3200+ OC ~ 2.35GHz runs at 40 celcius idle and 48 under stress (aerocool GT1000 really works!), Asrock K7VT4A , 1024MB Dual Channel DDR 400, MSI Nvidia FX5200 128MB OC ~ 600MHz mem 350MHz core,80GB SATA + 200GB SATA + 120GB IDE, 7.1 Channel Soundblaster Audigy 2 Platinum EX sound and midi interface. 19" Sony SDM-HS95 TFT monitor - sweeet
Comp2: AMD Sempron 2400+ OC ~ 2.0GHz (Stable), Asrock K7S41GX, 512MB DDR 333, Onboard Graphics, 40GB Maxtor IDE
set of monitors on the way soon :P
Google is your friend...
WorkComp: LAPTOP, intel celeron D 2.4GHz, 256MB DDR, 20GB hd. NO SCREEN IT WAS SAWN OFF :S (bag of crap)
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 6. February 2006 @ 23:43
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Member
1 product review
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6. February 2006 @ 23:51 |
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id agree with SypherTek if this computer was solely used for Video Editing and thats it!!
Playstation 2 ---- Matrix Infinity
Gamecube --------- Ninja Mod
Xbox 360 --------- Firmware Hack
Xbox-------------- Duo X2
PC---------------- Core 2 Duo e6850, 9800gtx, 4gig ddr2-8500, 780i Vista 64-bit
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AfterDawn Addict
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7. February 2006 @ 12:30 |
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LOL, yeah...too bad that macs are overpriced, underpowered machines that aren't compatible with 95% of the software out there. It was true ten years ago that macs outperfromed PCs for audio and video editing, but not anymore. PCs are just as good...I edit audio with Pro Tools everyday. I am forced to use macs at the school I teach at, and I use PCs at home. PCs are just a good if not better than macs.
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Senior Member
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7. February 2006 @ 17:24 |
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As far as setting up your hard drive, I would suggest you either:
Have a separate HD for that purpose.
Defrag any drive before dumping video content to it.
If you cannot afford to have a separate hard drive for it, at least create it's own partition to keep large video files stored. This way, your system won't have to work with fragmented files.
Say, for decoding and encoding video, I use both drives on this system. I defrag both drives, then dump the video into the Temp folder. I then encode the video to the other drives Temp folder. I delete the original content, then compress back to the other drive's second partition's Temp folder.
When it comes to speed, you can also gain a little, but not much, having the drive on a separate IDE channel. If it's an SATA drive, you needn't worry, it's already on it's own channel.
Min required specs for decent encoding time, agreed as posted. 2Ghz CPU, 1Gb RAM. (400FSB or better)
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 7. February 2006 @ 17:25
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