Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/08/18
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Hi- I'm working on both platforms and 3 OS's (Mac OS 8.6, NT 4, and Windows 95). In terms of the Photoshop interface itself, there is little to choose between the three. I find that the major difference from my point of view is that Windows allows renaming and deletion of files in the opening and closing dialogue boxes, while the Mac does not (AFIK). This is significant when you deal with large numbers of files and screw up as much as I do... Windows NT has no built-in colour management system, and that in Windows 95 is said to be flawed. Window's 98's colour management (at least potentially) is said to be on a par with Apple's Colorsync system. I believed Apple has announced that it intends to produce a Windows version of Colorsync. My systems at the office are a 300mhz G3 with 256MB of RAM, and a dual processor 200mhz NT system with 196MB. The performance of both systems in terms of image editing times is similar, and I consider them quite adequate for the high-volume production of image files suitable for 8x10 prints. In fact, printer output speeds (Epson Photo Stylus and 1200) are the limiting factor in production of prints of this size. (These systems were not my choice, by the way. Imagine getting a G3 as the result of a boondoggle!) My home system is a 166mhz MMX, with 128 MB of RAM. It is perfectly adequate for low-volume work, and does a reasonable job even on large files-e.g, 40-50MB. Recommendations? Avoid Windows NT due to lack of colour management. In general I find it less user-friendly than Windows 95 and it offers few real advantages for image editing other than support for multiple processors. The G3 is pleasant to use and fast. The interior design of the box is excellent- very easy to upgrade. The Photoshop interface is generally very similar to the Windows version. Personally, I find the Mac OS different from Windows but not necessarily better or worse functionally speaking. Note that unlike earlier Macs the G3 does not come with a SCSI card. You wo uld be wise to order one installed as part of your initial purchase. If you are comfortable with Windows, you might as well stick with it. You won't see any significant gains with a Mac, and will have the penalty of figuring out a different OS. Hardware? 128MB of RAM is not bad. 256 is much faster. A 3GB hard drive is marginally adequate. 6GB is OK in terms of being able to store a reasonable number of images in progress, but you might as well go for 9 or more given the dropping prices. Make sure you get a good monitor- at least 17". A nice sharp monitor makes a big difference in comfort levels when image editing. A video card with lots of RAM (I think 6 MB and more is commonplace these days) will speed up your work. I strongly recommend a CDRW drive. They are affordable and give you very stable backup copies of your files on affordable media. (Be sure to use "gold dye" CD-R discs for longevity!) Hope this helps. John Poirier Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, Canada >The general feeling amongst the Arts faculty people seems to favour Mac over >PC for Image manipulation. I intend to purchase a Nikon LS2000 and the Epson >photo printer. Should I change the habits of the past fifteen years and go >Mac. I shall retain a 166 Pentium for any economic work I may undertake as a >consultant. > >How much hard disc space do you recommend, how much RAM for Photoshop, and >what processor speed would you buy in a Mac? Of course budget constraints >enter into to the equation so I am budgeting about $2500 for the computer >alone. I do know that the rule "a computer is obsolete as soon as one opens >the box" holds true- so advances will be made monthly. How easy is it to >update Macs rather than replacing the whole machine? Many thanks for your >time. >Regards, >Doug >