I'm going to buy a computer soon, for the sole purpose of sound and video editing. No gaming is involved.I remember back in the day when Mac was geared towards that stuff, but I kind of fell out of the loop. I've now heard that Mac's are more powerful for this purpose, but Windows serves all of the applications.What should I buy?
4/7/2006 12:57:01 AM
Buy a mac.
4/7/2006 1:08:15 AM
get a mac but make sure autosave is onthey tend to "unexpectedly" quitbut i guess now that you're expecting it, you shouldn't have to worry, yes?
4/7/2006 1:12:11 AM
At least they don't "perform an illegal operation"
4/7/2006 1:15:51 AM
either way, someone is bullshitting me and i don't like it
4/7/2006 1:20:54 AM
I can understand an unexpected quit, but I cannot fathom an illegal operation.
4/7/2006 1:34:33 AM
My macs never "unexpectedly" quit after OS X release version was out. I would say the average program stability is about the same as under XP, although I haven't had a mac in a year or two.
4/7/2006 1:45:34 AM
final cut proadobe after effectsg5 apple mac4GB RAM-ZiP!-
4/7/2006 1:58:34 AM
^Wait for the new Intel based tower Mac to come out, but everything is else DING DING right on.
4/7/2006 2:13:09 AM
I do my editing work on a PC at DELTA, not even one that's all that great. Something like a gig of ram in a 3.0 GHz Dell workstation.Adobe AuditionAdobe PremiereAdobe After EffectsAvid XpressNew Sony DV deckWorks out for me, but I don't really have a handle on the difference between Mac and PC in performance nowadays either. We always use PCs over here.
4/7/2006 2:21:40 AM
The real key is, Final Cut Pro is fucking BOSS for video.The hardware isn't really the issue. One you've used FCP, going back to Adobe Production Suite just feels dirty
4/7/2006 2:26:01 AM
^ Indeed.FCP is the sweetest software you'll ever use. Should you wait for potential Intel PowerMacs? Maybe. But the current G5s are awesome as-is and the Apple Studio Software (w/ FCP, DVD Studio Pro, etc.) is just money.You really can't beat it for video/audio editing.
4/7/2006 2:32:56 AM
Thanks guys
4/7/2006 4:51:00 PM
By a new Mac with the Intel core and you can dual boot with OS X and Windows and have the best of both worlds.
4/7/2006 10:34:20 PM
I've heard a lot of praise for Final Cut Pro, but have never used it for a real project myself.Does it truly provide the same level of control that After Effects can provide? I've always had this perception it was a true Premiere competitor that had some of the features of After Effects combined.
4/7/2006 10:49:43 PM
just curious, what are ya'll doing video editing for
4/7/2006 11:56:28 PM
You know you might want to just get Final Cut Express depending on what you are planning to do.
4/8/2006 9:27:31 AM
^ Nah...the Academic Pack is like half off of retail and makes the full FCP/DVD Studio Pro/etc. package really reasonable (comparitively).If he's doing anything serious (i.e. making money/paying bills w/ video editing), get FCP. But yeah, if you're just messing around for fun stuff, go to the Apple Store in Durham & play around with it. I'm pretty sure FCP and FCP Express are installed on the Macs there and you could play around for hours if ya want.
4/8/2006 10:15:11 AM
if you're just editing home videos, the free software installed on your mac is above and beyond what you'll need and very easy to use.
4/8/2006 11:22:45 AM
The Language lab in Laundry has some Macs set up with FCP and I think FCE too. If you want to play with it, take a camera with you and mess around.However, if you have no video software knowledge, you aren't going to be able to figure out too easily what does what.
4/8/2006 4:56:29 PM