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Microstock Photography Forum - General => Off Topic => Topic started by: charged on May 23, 2019, 02:33
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I was just reading this article on Petapixel.
Apple’s First 8-Core MacBook Pro Runs Photoshop Up to 75% Faster
https://petapixel.com/2019/05/22/apples-first-8-core-macbook-pro-runs-photoshop-up-to-75-faster/
I "thought" most photoshop processes only run sequentially and do not multitask. Thus it would only use one core at a time, versus many cores at the same time. There are a number of articles online that go back a number of years that all say other than a few filters, most tasks in Photoshop do not use more than one core.
Is my knowledge wrong? I have a 2017 MBP. I'd seriously consider getting the new machine if it really ran photoshop 75% faster.
Thoughts?
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Straight from Adobe:
"Photoshop generally runs faster with more processor cores, although some features take greater advantage of the additional cores than others. However, you’ll get diminishing returns with multiple processor cores: The more cores you use, the less you get from each additional core. Therefore, Photoshop doesn’t run four times as fast on a computer with 16 processor cores as on a computer with four cores. For most users, the increase in performance that more than six cores provides doesn’t justify the increased cost."
You might see a nice boost with an eGPU, if you don't want to upgrade your entire computer.
https://helpx.adobe.com/photoshop/kb/photoshop-cc-gpu-card-faq.html
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75% faster than what? If it's a dual core 2012 machine with 4GB of RAM, then that's considerably less impressive than it being 75% faster than some recent, top spec, next best model.
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75% faster than what? If it's a dual core 2012 machine with 4GB of RAM, then that's considerably less impressive than it being 75% faster than some recent, top spec, next best model.
...read the article.
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Ah yes... good idea! Ok, sounds ok. I ain't buying a Mac but if I was then it sounds pretty good.