Neil
New Member
Hi all,
just about to order a new desktop computer - will be doing everything on it except gaming.
So, designing in Signlab, some Photoshop, ripping big files... as well as the normal daily stuff.
The build will be Intel Core i7 4770, 16GB RAM, 250GB SSD, 2TB HDD.
Will the Intel HD 4600 onboard graphics processor be okay for what we do?
I'm thinking it's better than what I curently use (Dell XPS 420 with 256MB Radeon HD 2600 XT).
Do we benefit from beefy GPU's for what we do?
Signlab certainly isn't slow on my current computer, only when I get sent huge files does it get bogged down. But some of the big files blow out to around 8 gig or so in the rip which can take a bit of time to spool (up to half an hour in Signlab's VPM for really big files). This seems to be handled by the CPU and Hard Drive moreso than the graphics card.
So, is the onboard graphics good enough nowadays for 2d design and photo editing, or do I still need a dedicated graphics card?
just about to order a new desktop computer - will be doing everything on it except gaming.
So, designing in Signlab, some Photoshop, ripping big files... as well as the normal daily stuff.
The build will be Intel Core i7 4770, 16GB RAM, 250GB SSD, 2TB HDD.
Will the Intel HD 4600 onboard graphics processor be okay for what we do?
I'm thinking it's better than what I curently use (Dell XPS 420 with 256MB Radeon HD 2600 XT).
Do we benefit from beefy GPU's for what we do?
Signlab certainly isn't slow on my current computer, only when I get sent huge files does it get bogged down. But some of the big files blow out to around 8 gig or so in the rip which can take a bit of time to spool (up to half an hour in Signlab's VPM for really big files). This seems to be handled by the CPU and Hard Drive moreso than the graphics card.
So, is the onboard graphics good enough nowadays for 2d design and photo editing, or do I still need a dedicated graphics card?