Showing posts with label minimum laptop for video editing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label minimum laptop for video editing. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Good laptop for Sony Vegas?




Allora


I've been looking for laptops that can efficiently run Sony Vegas. I know that editing videos can sometimes cause a laptop to lag, so I'd like to keep that to a minimum.

I'm looking for a laptop with a large hardrive (750 GB and up). My budget is up to $1200. The laptop can cost less, but it has to still be good quality. PLEASE leave links to the laptops, so I can read more about it and possibly buy it. And NO notebooks or ultrabooks, as I would like to have a cd drive.



Answer
This ASUS laptop

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16834230592
Core i7 3630QM(2.40GHz) 17.3" 12GB Memory 500GB HDD 7200rpm DVD±R/RW NVIDIA GeForce GTX 670M 1920 x 1080 1 Year Accidental Damage/30-Day Zero Bright Dot

This HP can be customized to what you need. If you want better performance upgrade the APU to a A10, dedicated graphics and increase the ram to 8GB.

http://www.shopping.hp.com/en_US/home-office/-/products/Laptops/HP-ENVY/C9W57AV;pgid=c7twGfjc0ptSRpIq7ZUcoGXQ0000fb8mNv9y;sid=NID2W1inOb6JXwkRbh2qz4GoAJwzDmy78dUe8LW2AJwzDtPc7Kuhl6jI?HP-ENVY-15z-j000-Notebook-PC A8-5550M APU HD 8000 Series Graphics 6GB DDR3 750GB 5400 rpm HD Starting at $500 after rebate

This HP can be customized to. Upgrade the Graphics to NVIDIA GeForce GT 740M 2048MB of dedicated video memory

http://shopping.hp.com/en_US/home-office/-/products/Laptops/HP-ENVY/E4T17AV?HP-ENVY-15t-j000-Quad-Edition-Notebook-PC i7-4700MQ 8GB DDR3 1TB 5400 rpm Hard Drive Starting at $800

Brand buying advise

You get what you pay for. Systems with high end parts with low prices are to be viewed with suspicion. They have to cut corners somewhere to get the price down. What cost you less today is going to cost you more tomorrow.

Apple makes a good quality laptop. The problem comes when it requires service or minor upgrades. It is near impossible to do anything with them. They even glue the battery and hard drive down so you can not change it. They solder the ram to the logic board so you can not increase it. They lock up most of the software so your stuck with what they approve.

Lenovo has serious stand behind their product problems. They bought IBM PC division and proceeded to drive the quality of the system into the ground. Their customer service is well below par. They even makes Dell customer service look good. Lenovo will not allow people to read instruction on how to access the BIOS menu or to get info on their puters on their web site unless you connect to them thru Facebook. They do this so they can spy on their users. The last and final thing to remember about them is they are a Chinese Government own company. It is up to you if you want to trust them.

Toshiba, Panasonic, Sony should be avoided because of their heavy modification of Windows and the drivers. If you remove some of the bloat they install, you can cripple the system.

Acer, Gateway, and eMachines should be avoided period. Low end system that are driving the race to the bottom.

Dell once made a good system and fell from grace. They are now struggling to regain their place in the market. Customer service is one of many problems with this company.

Alienware are glorified Dells and are more name then product. Priced extremely high for what you get. They do perform but you can get the same for less by looking around, just not packaged to be eye candy to the gamers.

Samsung has a history of using cheap parts in critical areas. Capacitors has been one area Samsung has a known history of going cheap, causing units to fail early. For that reason I would avoid them.

ASUS and HP do not modify Windows as bad as the other manufacturers. They have excellent build quality. They might add a lot of bloat but they also makes it easy to get rid of it.

Ultrabooks are the higher end of Wintel laptops but they have some of the same concerns as Apple. They make it next to impossible to change any hardware in them. Service of them will have to be done by the manufacturers. With most of them, you can not change your own battery or hard drive. They are designed to catch your eye but they are not any more special then other laptops except for the fact that they are slim or thin. Your paying for it being thin and slim. For the money your going to spend on it you can buy a much better laptop with more power.

Hybrids are the worse of the worse. The flip or detachable touch screens are just a disaster waiting to happen.

Never buy an All In One. They are far worst then laptops of any kind to service and they have a higher failure rate.

Choose wisely.

:)

Recommended Spec For HD Video Editing Laptop?




Mike


The laptop I am currently using struggles when editing videos - and is almost impossible to edit HD videos with. I need something a bit more powerful.

So, what would be the minimum requirements + a bit more, just to be sure?



Answer
Began doing video production for my job at the end of last year. Like you, at the time, I was attempting to edit HD footage with an underpowered laptop, both at work and at home. When I was researching how to upgrade my system, I found this article, which was a really big help: http://www.videoguys.com/Guide/E/Videoguys+System+recommendations+for+Video+Editing/0x4aebb06ba071d2b6a2cd784ce243a6c6.aspx

For home, I bought a Dell Studio XPS 435T: 8GB RAM, i7-920 processor, ATI Radeon HD video card, 750GB storage, and a 24'' monitor. At work, the company got me a Dell business workstation with 12GB RAM and a Xeon processor, with two 22'' monitors. A significant upgrade, to say the least. That may seem superfluous to you, but if you really want to build an HD-capable system, you need to go as beefy as you can.

That's why my advice would be to steer you away from a laptop; with a desktop, you're going to get far more bang for your buck, not to mention a much bigger screen.

It used to take an hour and a half to render a four minute video, and while editing, I was forced to have the preview window at the lowest/smallest resolution, both because of the lack of power and lack of screen real estate--not much fun and horribly time-consuming. Now, it takes eight minutes and I get to have the preview window at the best and biggest resolution, along with a timeline that stretches across two monitors--a whole lot of fun and much more efficient.

Which type of high def camcorder and files are you working with? AVCHD or HDV? Here's a blog post I wrote about my own workflow: http://www.werdofbert.com/2009/08/best-workflow-avchd-convert-editing.html

Any further questions, you can leave a comment and I'll get back to you. Hope this helped your decision!




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Friday, February 14, 2014

Recommended Spec For HD Video Editing Laptop?




Mike


The laptop I am currently using struggles when editing videos - and is almost impossible to edit HD videos with. I need something a bit more powerful.

So, what would be the minimum requirements + a bit more, just to be sure?



Answer
Began doing video production for my job at the end of last year. Like you, at the time, I was attempting to edit HD footage with an underpowered laptop, both at work and at home. When I was researching how to upgrade my system, I found this article, which was a really big help: http://www.videoguys.com/Guide/E/Videoguys+System+recommendations+for+Video+Editing/0x4aebb06ba071d2b6a2cd784ce243a6c6.aspx

For home, I bought a Dell Studio XPS 435T: 8GB RAM, i7-920 processor, ATI Radeon HD video card, 750GB storage, and a 24'' monitor. At work, the company got me a Dell business workstation with 12GB RAM and a Xeon processor, with two 22'' monitors. A significant upgrade, to say the least. That may seem superfluous to you, but if you really want to build an HD-capable system, you need to go as beefy as you can.

That's why my advice would be to steer you away from a laptop; with a desktop, you're going to get far more bang for your buck, not to mention a much bigger screen.

It used to take an hour and a half to render a four minute video, and while editing, I was forced to have the preview window at the lowest/smallest resolution, both because of the lack of power and lack of screen real estate--not much fun and horribly time-consuming. Now, it takes eight minutes and I get to have the preview window at the best and biggest resolution, along with a timeline that stretches across two monitors--a whole lot of fun and much more efficient.

Which type of high def camcorder and files are you working with? AVCHD or HDV? Here's a blog post I wrote about my own workflow: http://www.werdofbert.com/2009/08/best-workflow-avchd-convert-editing.html

Any further questions, you can leave a comment and I'll get back to you. Hope this helped your decision!

What is the minimum spec for a home laptop used for internet browsing, editing photos and occasional videos?




RIK_UK


Any brands that should be avoided?


Answer
Everyone will give you different answers, they're more suggestions than anything. It depends on the minimum requirements of the OS and software you choose.

If you get Vista:
Minimum 2GB RAM, 1.5GHz dual-core processor.
Recommended: 2GB RAM, 2GHz dual-core processor.
Why: Vista uses a lot of memory and processing power.

If you get XP:
Minimum 512MB RAM, 500MHz (Pentium III equivelant) processor.
Recommended: 1GB RAM, 1.0 GHz processor.
Why: For what you are asking, you don't need much - and XP doesn't use much.

More is always better...I'd up the processor before up-ing RAM. The RAM is very easy to upgrade and fairly cheap to change in the future (it just snaps out and a new board snaps in all under an access door on the bottom) but the processor will be very expensive and hard to upgrade and sometimes requires the computer be sent back for service.




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Friday, September 13, 2013

What is a good basic laptop for a university student?

minimum laptop for video editing
 on Download As tatuagens dividem opini�es: enquanto muitas pessoas acham ...
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poppytad


I'd only be doing basic stuff like microsoft office, internet browsing and such. Also, my degree might need some heavy video, audio and photo editing so I'd need a laptop that can handle those things and still run at a decent speed while I'm at it.

I'm also on a tight budget so the cheaper the better for me! Thanks!



Answer
There are various websites to get a good pc, but I see with eBay it does not matter when or just what you buy given that they in general contain 1000's from which to select and are also a lttle bit lower priced than in the retail store. You may look for your minimum needs and just what price tag you'd like to pay. Thus find what lowest specification you need and how much you happen to be ready to pay and also filter the outcomes in eBay. You might get a good deal any time of year.

What is a good laptop for multitasking while photo editing?




Chapulin


I want to be able to be on photoshop and youtube without freezing. I have an $800 budget. I know most laptops have 2GB - 4GB ram but many reviews say they have problems with the hardware and all. Which laptop would you recommend for me?


Answer
That's a tough one for $800. You need processing power, 4GB minimum, powerful video card and a 7200rpm hard drive to achieve what you are talking about. Win7 will help alot. Vista is much slower

The best I could do is $899 at Best Buy, but if you wait for a sale, or take advantage of their financing, it might work for you.

Asus G60VX has everything you need. I have last year's generation the Asus G50, which kicks ass in video games and Adobe CS4 Master Suite. It has the same specs as the G60.




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Thursday, August 29, 2013

What is a good basic laptop for a university student?

minimum laptop for video editing
 on Mediafire and rapishare links! For Download Your PC gAme NFS RUn Full ...
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poppytad


I'd only be doing basic stuff like microsoft office, internet browsing and such. Also, my degree might need some heavy video, audio and photo editing so I'd need a laptop that can handle those things and still run at a decent speed while I'm at it.

I'm also on a tight budget so the cheaper the better for me! Thanks!



Answer
There are various websites to get a good pc, but I see with eBay it does not matter when or just what you buy given that they in general contain 1000's from which to select and are also a lttle bit lower priced than in the retail store. You may look for your minimum needs and just what price tag you'd like to pay. Thus find what lowest specification you need and how much you happen to be ready to pay and also filter the outcomes in eBay. You might get a good deal any time of year.

What is a good laptop for multitasking while photo editing?




Chapulin


I want to be able to be on photoshop and youtube without freezing. I have an $800 budget. I know most laptops have 2GB - 4GB ram but many reviews say they have problems with the hardware and all. Which laptop would you recommend for me?


Answer
That's a tough one for $800. You need processing power, 4GB minimum, powerful video card and a 7200rpm hard drive to achieve what you are talking about. Win7 will help alot. Vista is much slower

The best I could do is $899 at Best Buy, but if you wait for a sale, or take advantage of their financing, it might work for you.

Asus G60VX has everything you need. I have last year's generation the Asus G50, which kicks ass in video games and Adobe CS4 Master Suite. It has the same specs as the G60.




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