Laptop for Adobe CS 5.5

blondel78

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Jul 9, 2011
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Hello,
I am planning on getting a laptop (HP ProBook 4350s core i5 - 2410, 500GB 7500RPM Hard drive,
Intel HD 3000 graphics, 4GB RAM.

I will be doing video editing with Adobe Premier pro and After effects CS5.5.

Will the laptop described above be adequate?

Yaw
 


graphics card will have little effect with cs5.5.

you will want to find a laptop with and i7 and preferably with up to 16gb of memory but 8 is definitely better than for and the i7 is a must if you are serious about it. those types of programs love more cores then love clock speed then memory then disk speed. so it would be beneficial to get a higher clocked i7. make sure your are getting a sandy bridge i7 denoted by the numbers 2630, 2720, 2820, or 2920. A SSD would be useful and you wouldnt regret getting on if you have the money to buy one.
 
I have Premiere pro and an Alienware M17x R2 that came with an i5 520M, and I put an i7 740QM - which would be similar to the i7 2720QM - and I noticed a 30% decrease in the time it takes to create the movies, definitely worth the extra hundred bucks to spring for the the i7
 


a 740qm and a 2720qm are miles apart lol in terms of performance. the 2720qm has newer archictecture that is 30% faster clock for clock then on top of that a faster clock speed.

but you are correct going from the i5 to i7 a 30% pickup should be expected.
 


Certain features, especially in Photoshop require a decent GPU. I have a 5870m in mine, and it is a solid performer, but sure sometimes I push it to the limits. But I agree, the CPU is more important.
 

amd cards can transcode but i dont believe they are compatible with hardware acceleration within the programs. could be wrong but i was under the impression that that was the benefit of nvidia card. CUDA that is.
 


You're 100% right about that, Adobe does tend to favor nVidia cards. On the certified GPU list, only nVidia cards are listed. That's mainly the reason why I have to disable some of the GPU-accelerated features at times, which, is not a deal breaker for me. But, you do lose a bit of crisp movement when editing with Ps.