Zum Hauptinhalt gehen

⚠️ Please note that this topic or post has been archived. The information contained here may no longer be accurate or up-to-date. ⚠️

Your Mac specs and Batch Time???

Kommentare

6 Kommentare

  • kariylit
    I made the test with 10x 5D files (raw size 13-15,5Mb) and i have a macbook pro laptop with 1,83 ghz processor and 5400rpm hd. I have 1,5 Gb of ram. No external drives connected at the moment.

    batch to jpeg high 300ppi

    The time was 2.25min
    0
  • Jason1
    10 x 1Ds Mk I files ca. 9MB per file -> Jpeg High 300dpi, 100%

    Mac Os X 10.4.6 Quad G5 2.5GHz 6.5GB RAM
    C1 3.7.4 Pro on Maxtor 7V300F0 300GB SATA
    Batching to different Maxtor 7V300F0 300GB SATA (2nd Disk)

    1 min 12 sec

    Jason

    Added in Edit:
    - Both drives are internal drives formatted as MacOs Extended Journaled, but have Spotlight switched off
    0
  • pmirror
    Jason, what a Mac. Quad G5 with 6.5 gig RAM. bravo....
    0
  • Jason1
    >Jason, what a Mac

    And still paying for it! I'm delighted that C1 makes full use of the available hardware - Activity monitor shows that all 4 cores are more-or-less maxed out during batch processing. Makes the cost much more easier to justify!

    Best wishes, J
    0
  • jpephoto
    [quote="JSewell" wrote:
    10 x 1Ds Mk I files ca. 9MB per file -> Jpeg High 300dpi, 100%

    Mac Os X 10.4.6 Quad G5 2.5GHz 6.5GB RAM
    C1 3.7.4 Pro on Maxtor 7V300F0 300GB SATA
    Batching to different Maxtor 7V300F0 300GB SATA (2nd Disk)

    1 min 12 sec

    Jason

    Added in Edit:
    - Both drives are internal drives formatted as MacOs Extended Journaled, but have Spotlight switched off


    how do you batch to seperate hard drive?
    0
  • Jason1
    >how do you batch to seperate hard drive?

    If you just want to process files to a separate drive, then you can do it this way:

    1) Go to the organise tool in C1. Use the file selector part at the bottom of the organise tool to navigate to your second drive

    2) Select the folder on your second drive that you want the processed files to be saved into, then click on it whilst holding down the CTRL key. A contextual menu should appear. Select 'Set as Process Folder' from the contextual menu. This sets the folder on the second drive as the process folder for the current session.

    In my case, I have set things up differently. I have the System and application software on one drive, and all the user folders on the second internal drive. So all new sessions are automatically created on the second drive in my home folder. If you would like instructions for this, post back.

    Best wishes, Jason
    0

Post ist für Kommentare geschlossen.