Pc Vs Mac For Photo Editing

  вторник 13 ноября
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Pc Vs Mac For Photo Editing Rating: 10,0/10 9997 votes

Jan 19, 2015 - Yes, that is a blanket across the board statement. Mac or PC, a desktop will run your editing software better than a laptop for less money. MacBooks are very capable of running editing software if you make sure they have some essential upgrades (see the Mac Recommendations section below). PhotoShop is the same on both but where does the Mac give you some edge? Color consistency among models. Your average PC is rarely the same color on.

I know it's an sempiternal debate, but I need to upgrade my computer and I need people's opinion. I currently have a 7 years old gaming laptop. I can run PS CS6 fine except I have to keep everything else closed for it to get the job done and saving or processing a lot of layers takes time. I know a lot of professional are iMAC users, and yes, they are pretty and stylish, but I need a laptop as I will also use the computer for personal reasons as well. (Can't afford both for now) I looked at Macbooks.

They're pretty and all, but expensive. PCs have better prices and I'm used to them. (I used a Mac in 1995. The one that looked like a box) but I'm opened to switching if it's going to help me edit. I just can't decide.

What are you using, why are you, and what are the pros and cons of using MAC or PC when being a photographer. Any help is much appreciated. All that matters is which OS you prefer. The hardware is 99% the same. Both will run Adobe just the same. And to be honest, having recently done the whole search myself, Apple's prices for a laptop is pretty much on par with the 'PC's of similar quality.

I personally went with a Core i5 Samsung, but it's the best I could get in my budget of $500. I would say minimum is a Core i5 with 8GB of RAM. Core i7 with 16GB would be better, obviously. And either a Radeon or GForce graphics card, none of that built in Intel stuff. I need a laptop​If you want to do photo editing (meaning tweaking, not just sorting, cataloguing), you are 100% at the mercy of your computer's screen. With a desktop, you can be picky (within your budget) about the screen. With a laptop, you need to carefully check the performance of the built-in screen.

Most laptops now come with that shiny surface that may be very well for movies, but which I hate for photos. Check how much the display colors shift as you tilt the screen; if they do, how could you possibly rely on that screen to adjust your images? OR, you buy, extra, a separate screen for photo use at home.

Check the reviews. I was a Windows PC user for years before switching to a Mac and they both do the same thing but in a slightly different way. I prefer the setup and look of the Mac but I don't consider one better that the other.

I will say, however, that I prefer the Mac's operating system but that's a personal choice. I think that the choice of a desktop or a laptop is the more important issue and if you can, you should go with the desktop especially if you're going to calibrate your display-and you really really should. If you really really need ( not want) a laptop get one. It is intended to be portable. But it will not last as long as a desktop if it is on 24.and if a motherboard componebt fails it is a bookend.

Look at windows 8 before you commit yourself. You may grow to hate it. Switching to a mac as many say the results and usage are similar. But if you switch to a mac you may buy a lot of software. Also many things that will work with XP or even windows 7 will not work with windows 8. I see complaints here all the time.

If you have stored information such as photos. The mac will only read the drive if it is formatted in a compatible manner. Even though I am a PC person ( sticking with xp as long as I can) mac's are good but I am not about to cross over ( I have a drive set up with windows 7 in a slide in holder so I am ready for eventual end of xp support. Considering that you're already have CS6 for the PC, you might want to stick that way. My workstation at work is a Dell Precision desktop Xeon 3.3Ghz with 12 gigs of ram running Win7.

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