

At their WWDC, in June, 2017, Apple announced and released new iMac computers, designed to meet the needs of professionals. These new systems sport a variety of very exciting features. 200 Responses to Configure a 2017 iMac for Video Editing [u] ← Older Comments. Mahmud says: July 13, 2018 at 5:35 am. I moved from PC to Mac. There's no reason to spend a fortune on video-editing software for your Mac or PC. Here's the best free software that can handle most (or all) of what paid software packages can accomplish.
Are you looking for the best free editing software for your PC or Mac? If so, congratulations, the video above has all the answers to your questions. There are a ton of video editing options out there, but a lot of the good ones are either super expensive or complicated to use. We’ve broken it down for you in the above video, and let you know which to avoid, which get an honourable mention, and what is our top pick for 2017 best free editing software!
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Hey, how are you guys doing? I'm a video editor (starting out) and beginner music producer. I work with Adobe CC programs. Im looking to buy a 2017 27 inch iMac. I have a budget of about 2700€ / 3000$.
I'll be crying when I spend it because it took so long to earn that money but hopefully the new iMac will will bring me more joy in return. Probably wont do much or no 4k editing for now. Did a lot of reading and I think the general consensus is: 4,2 i7 7700K = by far best performance but loud and hot 3,8 i5 7600K = Hotter than 7600 but cooler than i7 3,5 i5 7600 = sweet spot 3,4 i5 7500 = for the regular consumer I thought about getting the follwing configurations: 3,5 i5 7600 8GB RAM (will upgrade in future) 256GB SSD (only OS, applications and cache on SSD. Footage, sound libraries, VSTs on external HDD) Any video editors or music producers here? What are your thoughts? How can I get the most out of my budget?
Thanks in advance. I just ordered the i7 with 2TB SSD. Will have 40 GB RAMby the time I've installed the extra memory from OWC. I do video editing, not yet 4K but multiple full HD streams/multi-cam. Maybe my configuration is overkill at this time, but I want it to be sufficient for a few years. With video work, depending on what you do you're either I/O limited or processor-limited. With the i7 and the fast and large SSD, I hope to do alright on both fronts.
(The computer isn't here yet, so no performance report at this time.). Hey, how are you guys doing? I'm a video editor (starting out) and beginner music producer. I work with Adobe CC programs. Im looking to buy a 2017 27 inch iMac. I have a budget of about 2700€ / 3000$. I'll be crying when I spend it because it took so long to earn that money but hopefully the new iMac will will bring me more joy in return.
Probably wont do much or no 4k editing for now. Did a lot of reading and I think the general consensus is: 4,2 i7 7700K = by far best performance but loud and hot 3,8 i5 7600K = Hotter than 7600 but cooler than i7 3,5 i5 7600 = sweet spot 3,4 i5 7500 = for the regular consumer I thought about getting the follwing configurations: 3,5 i5 7600 8GB RAM (will upgrade in future) 256GB SSD (only OS, applications and cache on SSD. Footage, sound libraries, VSTs on external HDD) Any video editors or music producers here? What are your thoughts? How can I get the most out of my budget?
Thanks in advance. Click to expand.I don't think there is much basis for that. I have a top-spec 2015 iMac 27 with 4Ghz i7-6700K and have ordered a similar 2017 iMac with 4.2Ghz i7-7700K.
Corel paint shop pro for mac. I'm a professional video editor and often use the machine 8-10 hr a day. In FCPX it is not loud and I rarely hear the fans for normal editing. I also have Premiere CC on Mac and it does spin up the fans more, but it probably would do this on an i5 as well. Video editing is highly CPU-intensive, especially on Premiere on the Mac. Anyone can see this by just fast forwarding on a 4k H264 timeline and watching the CPU levels.