Pro Signs & Graphix
New Member
Chris -
1. You can definitely OC these newer machines. Do some reading and see what they do nowadays. Much of the OC'ing depends on the proper matching of the motherboard/cpu/memory.
2. The dual-core depends more on your want/needs to upgrade later. New software is coming and they will be able to better utilize dual-core processors.
3. 10k SATA drives are faster than 7.2k (just as 7.2k was/is faster than 5.4k) - but they get hot and lead to early failures because of the heat. If you get and run any 10k drives, make sure that you keep them cool.
My machine has a 120mm fan just for the drives (server case), and they are away from everything else (motherboard, cpu, etc.) Not sure if 15k is available in SATA. (SCSI is extremely expensive per meg - so I do not recomend it unless you plan on living with it forever, whcih will pay off with much lower failure rates and components of greater quality).
Lastly, your computer guy is not going to be able to offer much assistance (unless he regularly uses Photoshop), other than being able to build you a monster (for a lot less than 10 g's).
Call Adobe and find out what they recomend, before you start making commitments AND see if your RIP (and other needed software) will run on Vista. You need these answers first.
1. You can definitely OC these newer machines. Do some reading and see what they do nowadays. Much of the OC'ing depends on the proper matching of the motherboard/cpu/memory.
2. The dual-core depends more on your want/needs to upgrade later. New software is coming and they will be able to better utilize dual-core processors.
3. 10k SATA drives are faster than 7.2k (just as 7.2k was/is faster than 5.4k) - but they get hot and lead to early failures because of the heat. If you get and run any 10k drives, make sure that you keep them cool.
My machine has a 120mm fan just for the drives (server case), and they are away from everything else (motherboard, cpu, etc.) Not sure if 15k is available in SATA. (SCSI is extremely expensive per meg - so I do not recomend it unless you plan on living with it forever, whcih will pay off with much lower failure rates and components of greater quality).
Lastly, your computer guy is not going to be able to offer much assistance (unless he regularly uses Photoshop), other than being able to build you a monster (for a lot less than 10 g's).
Call Adobe and find out what they recomend, before you start making commitments AND see if your RIP (and other needed software) will run on Vista. You need these answers first.