computer best suited to......photoshop or sketchbo
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1 | please advice on this sheryl13 - 2021-01-18 07:33:00 |
2 | sheryl13 wrote:
The ram is easy to upgrade it's the other bits that matter. Without knowing model number of that Hp you mentioned no-one can give you any advice about it. nice_lady - 2021-01-18 07:45:00 |
3 | Photoshop doesn't need much of anything really. lythande1 - 2021-01-18 07:45:00 |
4 | thankyou thats very helpful sheryl13 - 2021-01-18 07:49:00 |
5 | nice_lady wrote:
sorry, perhaps should not have added that comment, i have no idea. sheryl13 - 2021-01-18 07:50:00 |
6 | sheryl13 wrote: sheryl13 - 2021-01-18 07:51:00 |
7 | nice_lady wrote:
On many modern laptops (and especially 2 in 1s) that is no longer true - RAM is soldered and cannot be upgraded vtecintegra - 2021-01-18 11:00:00 |
8 | This message was deleted. azza20 - 2021-01-18 22:43:00 |
9 | vtecintegra wrote: nice_lady - 2021-01-18 22:46:00 |
10 | People have been using photoshop for 20+ years on whatever computers were around. Surely pretty much anything is going to work, if it isn't the latest high speed wonder machine, one might just have to wait a few seconds for the effects to process? It isn't like one is rendering high resolution video or anything. tygertung - 2021-01-19 07:21:00 |
11 | tygertung wrote:
yes this is true, but drawing tablets havent been around for 20 + years sheryl13 - 2021-01-19 09:24:00 |
12 | sheryl13 wrote:
Interestingly they have. There were portable tablets back in the early '90s. Non-portable ones go back much further. But back to subject, my wife uses Photoshop on her 'regular' laptop for casual use without problem. soundsgood - 2021-01-19 10:18:00 |
13 | It seems that it was developed in '88 and version 1.0 was released in '90 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adobe_Photoshop Tablets seem even older, first introduced in the 19th centuary, but for computer input in '57 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graphics_tablet tygertung - 2021-01-19 10:47:00 |
14 | I think Moses received some tablets quite a bit earlier, according to one story! Is 'Nixon' still around? He might have a view. But I recall them being used as handhelds back in the '90s. I think that they monochrome. Perhaps they were the cheaper ones. soundsgood - 2021-01-19 12:02:00 |
15 | This message was deleted. azza20 - 2021-01-19 19:57:00 |
16 | tygertung wrote:
Ridiculous. OP it will perform "ok" on a cheap machine, for small non complicated work. But for anything serious and you want 1/ huge amounts of memory, you can't have too much, your tile size depends on it 2/a lot of fast storage, your scratch space depends on it 3/ a fast graphics card, photoshops gfx engine depends on it, CUDA/OpenCL processing, hardware vs software gfx compute, can be switched on in preferences if it detects you have a worthwhile card and driver installed. You will want to factor in a small usb tablet like a wacom intuos, Edited by ronaldo8 at 12:30 am, Wed 20 Jan ronaldo8 - 2021-01-20 00:15:00 |
17 | If the OP is a professional illustrator or photographer and is working with 50 MP pictures from a Canon 5D, they probably are not going to be asking this question. They are just wanting to do a bit of drawing using the photoshop and a tablet, so really, I don't think they will need the latest high end super computer. tygertung - 2021-01-20 08:02:00 |
18 | They are are they? They are an artist wanting to get into digital media. I know what that looks like, you however dont have a clue, just some assumptions based on no experience of the matter, are you any kind of artist who made the transition to digital media? From your reply is is plain you aren't. Your advice is good for the first year at which point they grow frustrated and annoyed with the slowness and limitation. ronaldo8 - 2021-01-20 10:33:00 |
19 | sheryl13 wrote:
That 4gb will be an albatross, you want 8 at least. Whatever you get, make sure it has an ssd, not a physical disk. If you can find something with at least some kind of gpu acceleration. Photoshop will run on a basic business laptop built for boring farts to run excel on but it is a loveless exercise. My advice is save up some more $ first else youll find yourself saddled with a mediocrity. Edited by ronaldo8 at 10:43 am, Wed 20 Jan ronaldo8 - 2021-01-20 10:41:00 |
20 | ronaldo8 has it right. Edited by gettinggrey at 11:29 am, Wed 20 Jan gettinggrey - 2021-01-20 11:20:00 |
21 | Add on another $600 - $700+ for a Wacom Intuos tablet too. gettinggrey - 2021-01-20 11:49:00 |
22 | Affinity is excellent, agreed. Possibly best feature, no Creative Cloud bloat. Edited by ronaldo8 at 12:36 pm, Wed 20 Jan ronaldo8 - 2021-01-20 12:34:00 |
23 | If OP only wants a 'painting' type of program (and doesn't actually need Photoshop, etc) then Krita is free and worthy of consideration. gettinggrey - 2021-01-20 13:10:00 |
24 | ronaldo8 wrote:
If you have been using it since V1, you will have noticed that the computers have become many thousands of times more powerful since then. tygertung - 2021-01-20 13:27:00 |
25 | Photoshop requires minimum RAM 8GB, 16GB recommended. gettinggrey - 2021-01-20 15:05:00 |
26 | Well perhaps a previous version of Photoshop might be sufficient for one's requirements, or perhaps an alternative free version such as Krita, GIMP or Inkscape? If one is using a free and open source programme, that would save a bit of money to spend on hardware instead. I would have thought that a desktop would be better than a laptop though. tygertung - 2021-01-20 15:18:00 |
27 | Yes, a desktop would be better and probably a better price/spec's than a laptop. gettinggrey - 2021-01-20 15:45:00 |
28 | tygertung wrote:
As have file sizes, both in terms of spatial resolution and bit depth. As has the complexity of what the engine is now doing as has the overall feature set it offers compared to then. Your advise to run it on any old toaster stinks, you simply don't know what the hell you are talking about. ronaldo8 - 2021-01-20 17:42:00 |
29 | gettinggrey wrote:
Autodesk sketchbook is now free and has always been a great app. Krita is great true, Fire Alpaca is another that comes to mind as does mediabang. Artrage is also brilliant piece of software, a local product as well, not free but quite cheap. ronaldo8 - 2021-01-20 17:49:00 |