![]() ![]() Some time, when I can afford the new version of Premiere Pro, then I would buy a new laptop, because at this time I can't do both (plus new MS Office etc. My current Asus laptop has graphic card NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050 T, which is better than Intel® Iris® Xe Graphics of the new Medion laptop, I assume, so instead of buying a laptop with more capacity but worse graphic card, I plan to keep the old laptop with better graphic card and pay to increase the capacity. Do you think this is good idea? I have no idea if increasing a laptop's capacity has any disadvantages, that is why I ask. This would cost me 1/3 of the price of that new laptop. Since I only have the old Premiere CS6 which would not work on this laptop, as you wrote, I decided not to buy that laptop for the time being and instead keep my 3-year old laptop but I might pay someone to increase RAM or DDR4 from current 8 GB to 16 GB, as well as SSD from current 512GB to 1TB. ![]() Also, I heard that because of transportation issues during pandemic, many new laptops have bad graphic cards. I am aware that this is a cheap laptop (but it offers much for the price) but I was wondering if it would suffice for Premiere, especially if the graphic card would do, since I was concerned about the complaints in another forum post here. When you wrote "its performance", I was not sure if you meant the performance of the laptop or of the graphic card and didn't quite get it why you compared it to MacBook Air since the laptop in question was with Windows. Your tech jargon is like Eskimo language to me but what I get from it, and correct me if I am wrong, the new Premiere Pro supports this graphic card, so this laptop would be good enough for it, right? I didn't receive the usual email notification about your reply, therefore I respond late. Thank you for your generous and kind answer. You can playback GPU accelerated effects and transitions in real-time without rendering them. ![]() I am also wondering of the old Premiere CS would be compatible with the newest technology Laptop, so I would reeeealy appreciate if someone competentcould give me clear answers. which is confusing because under system requirements this graphic card Intel® Iris® Xe Graphics is listed there. On a forum post I read that some complain about crashing after only a couple of minutes, glit c hes, pixelation and other malfunctions. I currently have very old Premiere version (CS6) because I can't afford newer one, but who knows, maybe in next couple years I would also get the newer version, so I would like to know if this graphic card Intel® Iris® Xe Graphics would be good for both Premiere versions ? Please help me. Premiere Pro runs perfectly fine after that. If you haven't found the solution to this yet, this is what I did(and it worked): Go to Device Manager from control panel. Intel® Core™ i7-1165G7 processor with Intel® Iris® Xe Graphics (2.80 GHz, up to 4.70 GHz with Intel® Turbo Boost Technology 2.0, 4 cores, 8 threads & 12 MB Intel® Smart Cache)ĢTB PCIe SSD, 16 GB DDR4 memory with up to 3,200 MHz I have the same laptop, but with a 7670M AMD graphic card. Careful system design regarding the CPU / GPU balance will reward with the best price/performance system.I would like to buy this laptop from Aldi in Germany - MEDION AKOYA Notebook S15449 (MD63975) - but I don't know if its Intel® Iris® Xe Graphics is suitable for Adobe Premiere CS6 - could anyone tell me if it would be ok without any problems? If you over specify the CPU, then not all of its power will be used, as the GPU will be working at maximum and won’t be able to pass enough work to the CPU. It’s essential to maintain a balance between GPU and CPU performance as a bottleneck can occur if one is more powerful than the other. Think of it like this, if you wanted to load a removals van with the contents of a house as quickly as possible, would you rather have the “worlds strongest man” (CPU) or a team of 100 ordinary people (GPU)? Adobe Premiere Pro video editing software would have the job broken down by the group of 100 to get it done quicker. The CPU has the role of marshalling these jobs to the GPU and deciphering the output. ![]() Adobe Premiere Pro uses GPU acceleration for many of its more complex and compute-intensive tasks this is the most efficient way to handle such functions because most image/video processing tasks can easily be broken down. ![]()
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