I've got my i7 2600K bits on order. I decided to go with 16G ram, one SSD (program storage), and one HDD (data storage). I got plenty money, however, I suspect the bottlenecks are transcoding (hence the 2600K) and program access (hence the SSD). As I understand it, > 12G DRAM and you really don't need a swap file, would reduce wear on the SSD, and because even SSDs are *much* slower than DRAM, speed things up - even more so with HDD.
*edit* Apparently this whole page file/swap file SSD thing is quite contraversial. According to Microsoft
http://blogs.msdn.com/b/e7/archive/2009/05/05/support-and-q-a-for-solid-state-drives-and.aspx you should put the page file on the SSD, but there is some discussion as to the amount of page file relative to the amount of RAM. So, I'll follow Microsoft's advice but maybe set a minimum page file of a couple gigabytes and see if it grows ...
I didn't see anything suggesting PD9 benefits from Tesla, but I don't know for sure.
There are really two issues with editing: editing, which is mostly 'meat' limited on any decent system, and transcoding which is hugely CPU intensive but can be done without human intervention. Its better to wait 60 minutes for a movie to transcode than 16 hours, and 30 minutes is better than 60, however, even 60 minutes is not so bad.
I wonder - do we have some sort of standard test file we could use to test our system performance? I'd be keen to find out what the difference are!
This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at Jan 11. 2011 12:07