Is It Worth Getting A Mac For Photo And Video Editing Or Is A Pc Just As Good And Cheaper?

Sorry for the question,The Mac and windows fight here and there.I am thinking of getting a mac or windows for hard core video editing.is there someone who can tell me which one I could get. Jun 12, 2014  Videomaker – Learn video production and editing, camera reviews › Forums › General › Video and Film Discussion › How Does Apple Mac Notebook Compare to PC for Editing? This topic contains 10 replies, has 8 voices, and was last updated by henbc 1 year ago. Dec 11, 2006  PC vs Mac for HD editing Videomaker – Learn video production and editing, camera reviews › Forums › General › Video and Film Discussion › PC vs Mac for HD editing This topic contains 1 reply, has 8 voices, and was last updated by videolab 1 year ago.

So there's no point in making an investment in editing until you find out whether you even like it or not. Most of you will decide you don't like it. So start real lo-end and get your feet wet before you dive off the deep end of the pool.

So, unless you like running to porn sites, downloading movies and software, opening up email attachments, you won't get a virus. Quickbooks pro for mac 2012 review. And why would you do this on your editing machine in the first place?

I found everything ineeded in 2.0 •. Hi guys, Ive been in the Post-Production industry for nearly 10 years & most of that time I have worked on PC’s, I have worked with Avid, Sony Editstation (That’s going back a bit) & Final Cut Pro recently on the MAC platform. The reason why we went to Mac was that we were after a reliable OS, first of all I found the PC’s to be a bit un-reliable & the macs you can thrash them all day & they still keep going. Microsoft office 2011 for mac. The other main concern was having it all integrated, with Avid I was exporting to AE & back & forth & finding it a bit of a pain, with Final Cut the integration with Motion & Soundtrack is much more easier & to produce DVD’s I couldnt go past Studio Pro. And finally bang for buck, Apple’s destroy’s its competitors. I was trained on FCP 3 and have had jobs on with FCP HD, AVID, Premiere and current job I’m using Sony Vegas. Over $15,000 – get an AVID package deal.

Those people either have some horribly demanding programs to run in the midst of severe multitasking, OR they are just that much into getting every ounce of performance they can from their system with every upgrade imaginable. All in all, anything over a single cpu solution in my mind needs a hell of alot of justification, 'cause I don't see it in the realm of video editing, or even high end performance gaming. I would show you a link to a 680, but right now I'm at work and the network blocks prevent me from posting any hyperlinks.

I now use an iMac to edit with Final Cut ProX. There are occasional problems, but my computer diagnostic skills have become rusty. FCPX has received mixed reviews; I happen to enjoy editing with its non-tradional magnetic storyline. Apple has certainly priced it competitively. But i f you long for a traditional timeline, you can license Premiere or buy other software. So my suggestion is to borrow someone's Mac and see how you like it! Then you'll be able to make an educated decision about what software you want to edit with, and which machines will run it dependably.

Best video players for mac. Get Windows Vista. Macs are too expensive and besides if you know how to use Windows, then you shouldn't experience any problems. The issues that makes Windows Vista problematic is the incompatibility with 3rd party software. Most of these software were programmed for Windows XP and earlier versions of Windows which are considered obsolete in Windows Vista but people still force it work. This causes the system to fail all the time because they forced Vista to recognize something it hasn't any codecs for. Meaning, Vista doesn't have the support for old 3rd party software just like older versions of Windows that doesn't have support for new 3rd party software.