- Joined
- May 18, 2010
- Messages
- 3,427 (0.64/day)
System Name | My baby |
---|---|
Processor | Athlon II X4 620 @ 3.5GHz, 1.45v, NB @ 2700Mhz, HT @ 2700Mhz - 24hr prime95 stable |
Motherboard | Asus M4A785TD-V EVO |
Cooling | Sonic Tower Rev 2 with 120mm Akasa attached, Akasa @ Front, Xilence Red Wing 120mm @ Rear |
Memory | 8 GB G.Skills 1600Mhz |
Video Card(s) | ATI ASUS Crossfire 5850 |
Storage | Crucial MX100 SATA 2.5 SSD |
Display(s) | Lenovo ThinkVision 27" (LEN P27h-10) |
Case | Antec VSK 2000 Black Tower Case |
Audio Device(s) | Onkyo TX-SR309 Receiver, 2x Kef Cresta 1, 1x Kef Center 20c |
Power Supply | OCZ StealthXstream II 600w, 4x12v/18A, 80% efficiency. |
Software | Windows 10 Professional 64-bit |
Wow, quite a debate I've started. Thanks for all the help, guys.
Re: replacing RAM, it actually has only one RAM slot according to the Acer data sheet. Someone mentioned in another thread that this probably meant there was a 4GB stick in there and the other 2GB was on the CPU, or something?
If so, I could replace the 4GB with an 8GB for 10GB overall.
I will continue to look into SSD, though with this particular laptop it would have to be externally connected.
I had a look at the data sheet, I believe this laptop has only 4GB of ram, can't see any evidence of an additional 2GB anywhere.
4GB of ram isn't a lot these days, I had a look at Cubase's website and 2GB is the minimum requirement. This is just to launch the app and use its basic operation without crashing and with a mediocre experience. I would think the recommended requirements is about 4GB which would put your system at the threshold already. If you're using other music production applications simultaneously 4GB is nowhere near enough. I would recommend upgrading to 8GB minimum. The more RAM you can fit into that single slot the better.
The RAM upgrade is your main priority as it will decrease thrashing from the HDD, this by proxy would also improve HDD performance too.
SDD would generally improve performance as well, boot times, application loading times general navigation snappiness when the OS and apps are installed directly onto the SSD. But productivity probably won't increase as music files are not very big. Where SSDs benefit most is in heavy read/write situations which isn't a normal scenario for music production. Although if money suffices I would recommend a SSD as a secondary priority.
PC World staff on the ground floor are sales people, they are not technicians, their job is to sell you computers to meet targets. Similarly a guy in a car showroom isn't a mechanic, he only knows enough to sell cars to meet a target. Technical support is ranked in priority in all sectors. If you phone BT they will pass you onto a sales person, if he can't help, you'll get to 1st line support, then 2nd line support, then 3rd line support. Then hopefully your issue gets solved.
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