Poll

x86 Or ARM?

x86
ARM

Author Topic: [MEGATHREAD] Personal Computer - Updated builds thanks to Logical Increments  (Read 1599009 times)

recording on an SSD would be a bad idea, you will quickly slow it down

recording on an SSD would be a bad idea, you will quickly slow it down
HDD's are too stuff to record on play on the same time.
Maybe a hybrid?

HDD's are too stuff to record on play on the same time.
Maybe a hybrid?
i would shoot for maybe a small hard drive on its own, or a 10,000 rpm hard drive
any hard drive thats only being used for recording should be speedy, as long as nothing else is trying to access it at the same time

i would shoot for maybe a small hard drive on its own, or a 10,000 rpm hard drive
any hard drive thats only being used for recording should be speedy, as long as nothing else is trying to access it at the same time
Well rip 120FPS slomo recordings
Actually a great idea.

EDIT: Jesus forget these are expensive. I can get an ssd for that stuff. forget that.
I mean 120 bucks for a 250Gb HDD?
« Last Edit: December 16, 2015, 06:08:38 PM by espio100 »

i would shoot for maybe a small hard drive on its own, or a 10,000 rpm hard drive
any hard drive thats only being used for recording should be speedy, as long as nothing else is trying to access it at the same time

I can record to my 7200 RPM HDD in 1080p 60fps fine with no hicups. I think it writes at 50-60mb/s. It's not particularily fast.

Well rip 120FPS slomo recordings
Actually a great idea.
as long as you dont record for like three hours at a time this should be enough to hold three or four recordings at once while you edit or process them
http://www.amazon.com/Western-Digital-Raptor-160GB-000RPM/dp/B003FOJ7SO
I can record to my 7200 RPM HDD in 1080p 60fps fine with no hicups. I think it writes at 50-60mb/s. It's not particularily fast.
this too a normal hard drive should be fine anyway

as long as you dont record for like three hours at a time this should be enough to hold three or four recordings at once while you edit or process them
http://www.amazon.com/Western-Digital-Raptor-160GB-000RPM/dp/B003FOJ7SO
Thats still 160 dollars
this too a normal hard drive should be fine anyway
Wow 10/10
These are 20 bucks a piece if you want small capacity.

Also a note I cant really buy stuff from amazon because they dont accept paypal because theyre gay

Also a note I cant really buy stuff from amazon because they dont accept paypal because theyre gay
i'm sure you can find some good ones on newegg.


speaking of which, i don't know i think i found a good one, thoughts?
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=9SIA5AD1XH1456&ignorebbr=1

i've yet to find any reviews on it though, and it might just be for a specific computer as a replacement hard-drive someone pls confirm.

« Last Edit: December 16, 2015, 07:19:24 PM by Xeidious* »



Now to patiently wait for my CPU to ship in

i have a question about the 750 titan and my current build
this is what i have now:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16883258094
it has a gt 610 but i want to upgrade it to the 750 ti
what i got is that i can use it but i'm still pretty new to this stuff and this is my first upgrade, i want some other people to look at it and see if there would be any compatibility problems or if i have to upgrade more parts


recording on an SSD would be a bad idea, you will quickly slow it down
how?


http://www.computerworld.com/article/2524589/data-center/brown townysis--ssd-performance----is-a-slowdown-inevitable-.html
1) May 8, 2009
2) A heavily fragmented SSD is still a hell of a lot faster than any hard-disk drive

1) May 8, 2009
2) A heavily fragmented SSD is still a hell of a lot faster than any hard-disk drive

It's stufflord, don't even bothering arguing, he can't even coordinate a functional business plan