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: post by an80smetalchick at 2005-07-26 12:06:24
He is not ready to do video editing yet. When he is ready, more ram will be purchased when the price comes down.
His current demand on video performance has resulted in on *machines with shared resources*, "low video memory" or "out of memory" messages.
I must partially disagree with your statement, "a 256mb nVidia will do nothing to help". This 256mb video card and another gig of ram, together will help with video memory required to perform the tasks he will wish to complete. Granted you expect an IBM compatible machine to handle the processes that really should be done on the correct form of equiptment, such as a macintosh.

http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/using/m...aker/expert/dunn_03august11_vc.mspx

"A system with a cheap and underpowered video card will be very sluggish in all Windows tasks, including video-editing applications. So although a 3-D video card won't truly accelerate your video editing, a capable 3-D video card will make your entire computing experience much easier and will accelerate the rendering process if you're using 3-D transitions. It will also help with DVD playback and will reduce the CPU load when playing back video files. Some cards (such as the ATI RADEON 9700 Pro) have the ability to remove digital artifacts from video, enhancing the visual quality. If you have a low-end computer with a built-in video card on the motherboard, there's an even more compelling reason to upgrade to a new video card: your system is probably using shared RAM. This means that the on-board video card borrows from your main system RAM, which reduces the RAM you have available for video editing, which slows everything down."




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