Patrick Janka
June 2nd, 2010, 10:35 AM
Hey, I'm currently on a Dell running Vista 32 Home and Sony Vegas. The pc is maybe a year and a half old. I bought it before I got into video. Some things I don't like right now is that Vegas won't play video in the preview screen at full quality (and sometimes even half quality) without being incredibly choppy. It also won't import AVI files where the audio isn't missing, so I have to first convert them in Any Video Converter to wmv. I may be doing something wrong, but I render my videos to mpeg-2 and ac-3 for video and audio to burn to DVD, but my DVD's always have terrible quality compared to the source files.
I've been reading through the threads here where people are trashing macs for no blu-ray, flash, price, etc. I'm not set in stone on this, but I'm considering picking up an iMac. My first question is RAM. Apparently FCP is 32 bit software, so does that mean anything more than 4GB of RAM would be wasted? I would also be doing audio production in Logic. The problem with that is certain features can only be used in 32 bit mode, so even if I add more RAM I won't be able to use it if I have to switch over to 32 bit from 64 bit. What would be the benefit of adding more than 4GB of RAM if their two big media software suites are essentially 32 bit?
If I get the iMac should I spring for the i7 2.8GHZ chip, or will the i5 2.66GHZ chip suffice? Will going with the i7 significantly decrease my rendering time? As of now my editing needs/skills are quite basic. I'm not sure how much more involved they will become as I really have no experience in graphics manipulation or special effects. I mainly do live event and commercial video with other things here and there. Even if I do some short films or documentaries I can't imagine doing much in the way of SFX.
My other option is to just get a 64 bit version of Win7, but then I'd need to upgrade everything on my PC. People here are saying FCP is outdated, clunky, and not intuitive, but then why is it industry standard? I peruse ads on various production sites and a lot of the jobs posted say "must know FCP", so it seems sort of necessary in order to work in the field.
I went to the Apple store yesterday and played around with the iMac. Two things I noticed right away, excessive glare on the glass screen (although it's bright in there and I generally work in the dark at home), and the magic mouse is a bit sluggish and not very accurate.
Lastly, I'd love to get a refurb'd mac from the site, but they always seem to only have 1TB drives. I'd prefer a 2TB. I do have a 1TB external, but it's USB/eSATA. From what I've read here using a USB external is a no-no, correct? Also, the mac has no eSATA port :( Not to mention the external drive is kind of noisy, and would be two more plugs (usb and power). This is sort of a related question, I guess, but do you guys delete your source video files after completing a project, or do you keep them on hand? They take up a lot of space, but I get a little wary of deleting them just in case I need to re-edit a project down the road. That's my reasoning for having a 2TB drive, but it seems some of you work on macbooks with 500GB. Are you all using external drives?
What say ye?
Thanks!
I've been reading through the threads here where people are trashing macs for no blu-ray, flash, price, etc. I'm not set in stone on this, but I'm considering picking up an iMac. My first question is RAM. Apparently FCP is 32 bit software, so does that mean anything more than 4GB of RAM would be wasted? I would also be doing audio production in Logic. The problem with that is certain features can only be used in 32 bit mode, so even if I add more RAM I won't be able to use it if I have to switch over to 32 bit from 64 bit. What would be the benefit of adding more than 4GB of RAM if their two big media software suites are essentially 32 bit?
If I get the iMac should I spring for the i7 2.8GHZ chip, or will the i5 2.66GHZ chip suffice? Will going with the i7 significantly decrease my rendering time? As of now my editing needs/skills are quite basic. I'm not sure how much more involved they will become as I really have no experience in graphics manipulation or special effects. I mainly do live event and commercial video with other things here and there. Even if I do some short films or documentaries I can't imagine doing much in the way of SFX.
My other option is to just get a 64 bit version of Win7, but then I'd need to upgrade everything on my PC. People here are saying FCP is outdated, clunky, and not intuitive, but then why is it industry standard? I peruse ads on various production sites and a lot of the jobs posted say "must know FCP", so it seems sort of necessary in order to work in the field.
I went to the Apple store yesterday and played around with the iMac. Two things I noticed right away, excessive glare on the glass screen (although it's bright in there and I generally work in the dark at home), and the magic mouse is a bit sluggish and not very accurate.
Lastly, I'd love to get a refurb'd mac from the site, but they always seem to only have 1TB drives. I'd prefer a 2TB. I do have a 1TB external, but it's USB/eSATA. From what I've read here using a USB external is a no-no, correct? Also, the mac has no eSATA port :( Not to mention the external drive is kind of noisy, and would be two more plugs (usb and power). This is sort of a related question, I guess, but do you guys delete your source video files after completing a project, or do you keep them on hand? They take up a lot of space, but I get a little wary of deleting them just in case I need to re-edit a project down the road. That's my reasoning for having a 2TB drive, but it seems some of you work on macbooks with 500GB. Are you all using external drives?
What say ye?
Thanks!