"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Ha... Nice cat. I wasn't trying to reiterate--just wondering if I was the only one not alpha testing CS6.That link Pierre posted was for a used computer at an utterly amazing price, right?-Wasn't the whole computer selling for what that i7 2600 goes for? And those Quadro cards *are* pretty sweet.Inkman: Hit Win+R and type "resmon", you can get info on memory, disk, and CPU usage. I only have six gigs on the new-ish laptop, and I can't seem to use over half of it without trying really hard. Go figure. Anyone have screen shots of resmon, and how they're killing ten or twenty gigs of memory? Dan: It's quite possible, as discussed in the other thread, that the power supply had something to do with your Mobo being fried, if that's what happened. Bad power can fry just about anything, and a power supply that's going bad can do amazingly crappy things to your computer. You can destroy just about any electronic component with 'dirty' power, or power that is out of range--many would-be techs have discovered that with their own body's electricity.It's really too bad more power supplies don't have proper line filtering capacitors.
One of the simplest ways to speed up illustrator is to keep you vectors clean with a minimum amount of nodes & individual objects. There are ways to clean up the most complex paths. Also as with it an photoshop there are 5 ways to do anything choose the ones adding the least to the file size of the document & are that are less memory intensive.
All true, but with memory, you dont have to worry about any of that.
Yeah, but the square footage analogy would only work if you had some microsoft and adobe engineers telling you what you could do with the extra space. Linux analogy is great, it's too bad Adobe won't touch it. I'm with Derek, that it's not that hard to learn how to create lean fast files, and if you already have the best processor you can get, nothing will make it work faster--a leaner file will work faster period, no matter what computer you own..And more RAM is great--I'm not trying to say you shouldn't get more RAM if you can use it, only that you shouldn't be worrying about getting more RAM if you don't. If you feel you need a processor that came out last year instead of three years ago, by all means, fork over the money. I'm not trying to step on anyone's buyers pride/remorse. Just seems odd to me that people who may keep the same computer for 3 or even 5-10 years would want to spend 3X the amount of a two or three year old awesome computer for a this year awesome computer--unless they're planning on getting a new awesome computer every year. I guess my point was, when the whole computer costs what another CPU goes for, seems like a 3-4x difference in speed is a decent value either way--whether or not you have the bucks to drop on the fast one.Just my opinion, not trying to tell anyone what to do...
A lean file that's half the size is twice as fast--whether you have an i7, or a PIII. As for saving copies, gigabytes are even cheaper on hard drives than they are in RAM.
Not to say you can't value minutes of your time adding up in hundreds of dollars if that's all you do. Again, not telling you to do anything.
I disagree, I see no delay be it a small file or a large file. I can work with files 100's of mb or 1mb they run the same, by your same thought process a computer with less specs will be slower. I am certainly not going to change how I work over a $100 bucks in ram. I mean seriously how much do you value your time? I bet I could justify that ram cost in less than a week in time savings.We design every day, often 8hrs a day. It doesn't take long or much at all to justify a powerful computer here, time saved is drastic by working the way you want, not having to have a computer dictate how you work with it. I find big value in that. I have computers from slow to fast, I have came from shitty to awesome, I know exactly the differences. I now enjoy running what I want, as much of it as I want, and having big ole honkin' files that take no time at all to deal with on my computer. It's not that expensive to be able to do that either IMO.If I was only doing minor design work, or not much design work I am sure it would be less critical, however that's not the case here.
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on March 09, 2012, 11:23:20 AMI disagree, I see no delay be it a small file or a large file. I can work with files 100's of mb or 1mb they run the same, by your same thought process a computer with less specs will be slower. I am certainly not going to change how I work over a $100 bucks in ram. I mean seriously how much do you value your time? I bet I could justify that ram cost in less than a week in time savings.We design every day, often 8hrs a day. It doesn't take long or much at all to justify a powerful computer here, time saved is drastic by working the way you want, not having to have a computer dictate how you work with it. I find big value in that. I have computers from slow to fast, I have came from shitty to awesome, I know exactly the differences. I now enjoy running what I want, as much of it as I want, and having big ole honkin' files that take no time at all to deal with on my computer. It's not that expensive to be able to do that either IMO.If I was only doing minor design work, or not much design work I am sure it would be less critical, however that's not the case here. You've taught me a great lesson on valuing my time--I'll try not to post any observations that are contrary to yours. I'm glad we can agree on the second part though.
I think both of you guys are correct.The file would be much faster... problem is the scale in which you are measuring it on. On a pIII with a gig of ram it would be seconds (maybe minutes) but on that i7 with 32gigs of ram we are talking about milliseconds if not less of a difference. Basically it's not perceivable to Brandt at that point so it's a moot point.Granted, it's obviously better practice to create a more fit file than a bloated one. This is why things are so ridiculous everywhere in the computer world. "hey, ever user has like 4+ gigs of ram and a terabyte of storage... who cares how many resources our product uses" Boom you have CS5 taking up 15gigs of space and windows needing 20gigs for a basic install. That's ridiculous!For the record that 6 core cpu w/ 16 gigs of DDR3 ram and a 60gig SSD sata6 hard drive, mobo with USB3 and other bells and whistles and a bad a$$ super cool (temp wise) case... ran me about $600 bucks. This doesn't count the dual 24" monitors she runs, but those are system independent.