Hi Bob,
I would get the largest ram stick my money can buy, always leave the door open to for future expansion.
If 32Gb is going to be enough, probably not with 10Gigapixel pano's but its a good step in the right direction. What you will also need which is also in Joergen's reply and link, is fast hard drives and better yet SSD's, preferable in RAID-0 for increased speed.
The system is only as fast as your slowest link in it, usually the stroage e.g. Harddrives/SSD's
Henrik Tived
----- Original Message -----From:pt...@googlegroups.comTo:"PTGui Support" <pt...@googlegroups.com>Cc:Sent:Tue, 1 May 2012 20:13:00 -0700 (PDT)Subject:[PTGui] 32 GB Memory in new machine enough these days?
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Bob
Henrick is totally correct, to speed up a computer, you would never look at the CPU or RAM (assuming you have enough for the OS) as the first upgrade options, always put in the fastest hard drives you can afford. However, the super-fast SATA 3 will only achieve top transfer speeds of 6Gbs if the motherboard has a SATA 3 Bus, too. Obvious really.
If you think about it, all of a computer’s processing is done using what is called the fetch execute cycle. The process is basically where the computer reads the hard disk for the information required by the CPU, but ahead of the need for it and writes it into RAM which is much faster that the disk. When the CPU requires the information it is read from RAM and processed in whatever way and by whatever program is using it. It is then written back into RAM to wait to be written back to the original file and saved or written as temporary information into Cache, another place on the hard disk.
The CPU and RAM these days are very fast but there is always room to upgrade as and when you can afford it. However, these upgrades will never increase your computer’s performance if the hard disk has a slow rotational speed, typical laptop is 5400rpm and a SATA 1 is 7,200rpm or the motherboard’s bus speed is only SATA 1 or SATA 2.
Similarly, if you install SATA 3 drives like the Western Digital VelociRaptor that run at 10,000rpm and a transfer rate of up to 6Gbs if the bus on the board is not up to it. The drive will default to the maximum data bottleneck on the board.
In short, the whole system runs at the speed of the slowest component. If this is not the hard disks then it is the bus.
Hope this helps.
Kevin
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This might be easier if I could firsthand experience what an SSD
brings to the table verses a 6Gbs verses a 3Gbs. I'm running 32 bit
Vista with 3 GB of memory and slow drives.
32GB is plenty. have a look at http://www.facebook.com/groups/panoramicphotographers/doc/255048297872622/ - this should give you some ideas where you could improve your next build.
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Interesting...but... for people that has NO access to facebook!?
Fall 2011:
Here is my recommendation for a PTgui/photoshop machine in regards to drives and storage. It is mac centric, but windows setups would work in a similar fashion.
Technical preface:
Equpiment to buy:
Steps:
Advantages of this setup:
Older projects and archives:
I would offload older projects to external disks, with the proper redundancy (2-3 copies), and remove them from the working documents partition. I use naked SATA drives and a dock for this purpose, and always have one set safely in another location (i.e. bank vault). Spin up your backup drives regularily (every 3-6 months at least), and do a data validation test to make sure all data is still intact. Migrate the archive to bigger/newer drives as soon as a new storage media class has been established (i.e. 6TB drives in 2013 and holographic storage in 2015).
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