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Old February 20th 12, 06:14 AM posted to rec.photo.equipment.35mm
Alan Justice
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Posts: 94
Default Will a new computer help?

"K W Hart" wrote in message
...

"Alan Justice" wrote in message
m...
I have recently started editing digital files and it is very slow (RAW:

16
MP, 24 MB). (Slides were slow too, but now I end up with many more
shots.)
I have many hundreds of images to edit after a shoot. I use Canon
software
that came with the 1D Mk4 (ver. 3.8.1.0, 2010). It takes about 2

minutes
to
load 1000 images into the display when I click on the folder. This

makes
it
impractical to go back and forth between different folders. To best
evaluate
images I display most of them full screen. It takes over 3 sec to load

a
single picture to full frame. That's about 1 hour just waiting,

assuming
I
only want to look at each full frame once.

Is my computer the slow part, the software, or what? And if hardware

will
help, should I worry more about processor speed or RAM?

I also need another 2 TB of disk space and the same for backup, and I
don't
know if this computer will handle it, so I may need a new computer

anyway.

I have a Dell with Pentium 4 Processor, 2.8 GHz with 2 GB SDRAM, Win XP.

--
Alan Justice
http://home.earthlink.net/~wildlifepaparazzi/



Generally, adding RAM improves speed. When the computer needs more RAM

than
it has, it uses the hard drive as virtual RAM. The hard drive is

incredibly
slower than actual RAM- relatively speaking.
You could also bring up the Task Manager (CTRL+ALT+DEL) and see how many
programs are running at the same time. If you have a bunch of background
stuff running, that will slow down your computer. Along that line, here's

a
very risky possibility: turn off your anti-virus while editting. If you do
this, I would physically disconnect the computer from the outside world.
Anti-virus software looks at every file you open and compares the contents
to a database of known problems.

But, here's a really wild possible solution: take fewer photos by making
sure that each photo will be good before you fire the shutter. Less time
spent editting. If I had 100's of image after a shoot, it would have been

a
very long session. And a very long session ahead in the darkroom.


--
Ken Hart



In the Task Manager there are 40 Processes running. I have no idea what
most of them are, so I don't know if I can turn them off. PhotoShop takes
up 10x more mamory than any other one listed. I have not seen a difference
in DPP when I shut it down. This computer is not online, so I trust
anti-virus software is not running.

Most of those 100's of shots are wildlife in action. I have to just hold
down the shutter button and hope that one of them is a winner. And with
shifting light, I bracket (3 or 5). I'd rather spend more time editing if
it means getting the shot.

Thanks for your comments.