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1. Re: HP Pavilion Elite HPE-130sc
John T Smith Sep 15, 2010 8:46 AM (in response to lars@fors.name)According to the specifications at http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/document?docname=c01998983&tmp_track_link=ot_faqs/top_i ssues/en_cz/c01998983/loc:2&lc=en&dlc=cs&cc=cz&lang=cs&product=4119542 that computer has only one hard drive
Only having one hard drive will not work well for video editing... you need AT LEAST two hard drives
That is two physical hard drives, never a partition
Read Harm on drive setup http://forums.adobe.com/thread/662972?tstart=0
- click the embedded picture in Harm's message to enlarge to reading size
- you need AT LEAST 2 drives for video editing, 3 is better
- some HD formats work better with (require) RAID
Read Hunt on Partitions http://forums.adobe.com/thread/650708?tstart=0
A link with many ideas about computer setup http://forums.adobe.com/thread/436215?tstart=0 -
2. Re: HP Pavilion Elite HPE-130sc
Steve Grisetti Sep 15, 2010 8:47 AM (in response to lars@fors.name)Without thousands of models of computers available out there, the odds of someone using this exact model are pretty slim, lars.
HP Pavilions are usually excellent products though. (Nearly all of my PCs are HPs, and I've always been pleased with the hardware.) And you've certainly got enough power to run the program.
But much depends on what you're using for your source video. Video from miniDV and HDV tape-based video is the ideal format for this program. AVCHD can also work well as source video, as long as you use the right project preset, have plenty of power and render often as you work. Other video formats, however, can be iffy.
But the best way to find out if your system can handle this program with your video is to download the free trial and give it a test drive. That's what it's there for!
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3. Re: HP Pavilion Elite HPE-130sc
lars@fors.name Sep 15, 2010 12:55 PM (in response to lars@fors.name)Thank You for your quickly answer!
Lars Fors


