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Computer upgrade for photoshop, which is better?
Current configuration:
Processor: Intel® Core™ i7-860 Processor (8M Cache, 2.80 GHz)
Video card: Sapphire Radeon HD 5870 850Mhz PCI-E 2.0 1024Mb 48...
Memory: Corsair 2GB 1333 MHz (2 sticks)
HDD: Samsung HD103SI (fool at 5400 rpm).
Task:
To understand whether it is possible to significantly increase the speed of work in Photoshop with the addition of an SSD and an increase in the amount of memory. I am engaged in the development of website and mobile application design, hundreds of layers, dozens of artboards.
Questions:
If it is possible to solve the problem using the method described above, then:
1. How much memory is needed?
2. Is the SSD enough for the system and photoshop / illustrator (80 gigs) or is it still necessary to store the source files?
3. I would like to know how well Photoshop works with video cards and whether it makes sense to change to Nvidia to speed up the work.
4. Does it make sense to take several small HDDs for different tasks (one for static files (clips, sources, movies, music), the second for software and games, the third for backups) to speed up the work? Will there be a noticeable increase?
Thanks for answers.
Answer the question
In order to leave comments, you need to log in
Questions:
If it is possible to solve the problem using the method described above, then:
1. How much memory is needed?
2. Is the SSD enough for the system and photoshop / illustrator (80 gigs) or is it still necessary to store the source files?
3. I would like to know how well Photoshop works with video cards and whether it makes sense to change to Nvidia to speed up the work.
4. Does it make sense to take several small HDDs for different tasks (one for static files (clips, sources, movies, music), the second for software and games, the third for backups) to speed up the work? Will there be a noticeable increase?
You can leave this graphics, add memory up to 8 gigabytes. SSD inexpensive gigabyte 120 for OS, Photoshop, etc. Regular HDD for sources and a second one for backup as needed. Personally, I do not trust a hard drive with two or more drives. It is better to take terabytes.
Your computer is already aged, in a year or two it will begin to die. So take the SSD and graphics card with a spare, to transfer to a new PC. And yes, NVidia often flickers in Photoshop circles. Memory 8 Gig, if the OS is 64-bit, it will be very useful. Good luck.
1) burn 16 GB for photoshop how to do it, history, layers, etc., etc.
2) 80 gigs should be enough, but here the more the better, besides that the RAM didn’t fit, photoshop will stuff it into the cache
3) photoshop uses CC to speed up opencl, opencl, due to the special laziness of nvidia programmers, works as a wrapper for kuda and not a separate driver, which has a bad effect on performance, 5 *** the series was noticed for inaccurate calculations when working with opencl
4) usually do so
ssd - system, software, cache , speed-critical data
1 hard file washer
2 hard backups
sometimes use a slightly modified scheme
1 hard sources
2 hard results
3 hard backups
SSD is obligatory, and operatives up to 8, Windows should be on SSD and all projects, the speed of Photoshop will increase due to the increase in the speed of the OS (because it will be on ssd) and also the time to save and open the file will increase by 25, but only files must be located or saved on the SSD
It is necessary to understand the minimum basic things. Advisors from above do not fully understand this either.
"Photoshop speed" does not exist.
It can slow down anything and anything.
I have a Core i7 4.3Ghz, 16GB of memory and three SSDs (HDD is not in the system). One of the SSDs is dedicated personally for Photoshop. It still slows down.
1. HDD in a modern computer should not be at all. (data storage only).
2. 2GB of memory was enough in 2003. In 2016, this figure must be raised to the power of four.
3. In Photoshop, everything connected with the video card must be turned off immediately.
4. The performance of various aspects of Photoshop, especially the interface, depends on its version. The rule - the older, the faster. For example CC is unusable.
5. Some nice results can be achieved with settings.
Therefore, yes, increasing memory, getting rid of the HDD is basic. But, say, a banal shift of 50 layers by 10px in a 1500 layer document takes a couple of seconds, and there are only two ways to speed it up: downgrade the version, or the processor frequency (25Ghz will be the very thing).
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