Are high end PC's really cheaper? I just tried pricing a 12core HP with 2.6ghz processors, a decent graphics card, 2TB or HD, and something like 14GB or RAM. I was coming very close to 5k just for the box....And that is without SSD, etc... Maybe I'm looking in the wrong place? On Apr 11, 2012, at 6:10 PM, Teddy Gage wrote: While I understand the issue with switching (despite very few plugins being only available for Mac) you aren't seriously suggesting professionals only use Macs? Top end post houses focused on 3D are almost exclusively PC. The Mac pro line is seriously stale right now...
On Apr 11, 2012 6:04 PM, "Dann Stubbs" < dann@darkskydigital.com> wrote:
yeah just ignore the thousands of dollars in apps and workflow you may have to give up or pay to upgrade to make a change to save $500
great advice! wonder why you don't see more long time professionals espouse that view...
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On Apr 11, 2012, at 5:58 PM, Teddy Gage wrote: Buy a pc. 200% cheaper. Choose your own graphics card etc. And faster, if you spring for sandy bridge i7s. :)
On Apr 11, 2012 5:44 PM, "Rob Birnholz" < absolutemotion@birnholz.com> wrote:
I am also interested in this question. My MacPro 2.1, while a workhorse, is showing its age and is ready to slide down to the #2 spot in my workflow. But with no new pro offerings from Apple, I'm wondering if a top end 27" iMac will fill the bill. My biggest concerns are with heavy duty AE rendering and to a lesser extent no CUDA capability.
I hope to have a better idea of where things are headed after next week.
Rob Birnholz
Absolute Motion Graphics, Inc.
Longwood, Florida
www.absolutemotiongraphics.com
(sent from a mobile device)
On Apr 11, 2012, at 4:18 PM, joe cafe <cafe.joe@gmail.com> wrote:
> Is anyone using AE on an iMac, and is it to be recommended for broadcast motion design?
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