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1183 points robenkleene | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0.001s | source
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AlexandrB ◴[] No.24839296[source]
Both major consumer OS vendors seem hell-bent on bringing the OS layer under their complete control. As a power user, it's very frustrating. Meanwhile "desktop" Linux still kind of sucks, just like it did 10 years ago. I don't have much hope of seeing a compelling, unified UX out of Linux in my lifetime.
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dylan604 ◴[] No.24839643[source]
What is it about Adobe software that makes it only work on Windows or macOS? Both of their graphics engines are totally different, so what makes it so difficult for Linux compatibility? It's the only software package that keeps me beholden to Apple (I'll never run Windows of my own decision).
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jasonv ◴[] No.24840042[source]
I have an aging MacBook Air (works great for 99% of the things I want to do), an aging iPad Pro, and an iPhone XR.

I probably am in the market to replace them in that order. I just bought my son a Lenovo laptop because he needed Windows.

I'm dismayed at where Apple is going, so I'm considering a Dell Linux laptop as my daily driver.

I need to do some video editing, so for a while I'll use my son's laptop, and possibly get a Mac Mini if I really need to keep up with video editing.

My thinking is I'll buy the minimum I need to keep up with my video editing but make more aligned choices for my daily drivers.

Sitting on those thoughts more has left me entirely cold to the iPhone 12 announcements last week.

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mcyukon ◴[] No.24842045[source]
I'm in the same boat, just more from a Photography standpoint. Oldest Mac I own is a 2012 MBP and I really do not see any appeal in any of the newer machines. I built myself fairly high end Mini ITX Windows machine for a fraction of what a comparable Mac would cost. Only downside is having a somewhat bigger PC on my desk.

For video editing I was very surprised at how quickly I picked up / understood the Free version of Davinci Resolve after looking for a Final Cut replacement for my gaming PC.

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dylan604 ◴[] No.24843445[source]
The one thing the newer machines have are better discrete GPUs. Everything now will use the GPU from web browsing to full on video/photo editing and color correction. Your 2012 GPU might as well be hanging out with Moses its so old in GPU years. The speed difference you'll see in a photo edit standpoint will justify your upgrade. If you are even halfway serious about using Resolve, you cannot put enough GPU power in a box. (I've built Resolve desktop systems with 3 GPUs in a Mac PCIe external chasis. PCs/Linux Resolve systems can have even more GPUs.)
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jasonv ◴[] No.24844692[source]
Can you expand on, or link to, multiple GPUs for photo and video editing?
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1. dylan604 ◴[] No.24848864[source]
https://documents.blackmagicdesign.com/ConfigGuides/DaVinciR...

There's an entire guide provided by BMD that tells you exactly what products are compatible with your OS and particular computer. It even comes as included documentation with the installer. You know, those PDFs in the folder with the install app that nobody looks at? After Apple's nixing Nvidia from their platform, you're limited to AMD GPUs for Mac. For PC, have more options. For Linux, you can go absolutely nuts with the amount of GPU since you can utilize some of the GPU appliances rather than PCIe boards.

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2. jasonv ◴[] No.24851047[source]
Thanks!