I haven't used a notebook to edit on since CS3 but the one I had then was an 
Asus. At the time the specs for a higher end gaming notebook matched the specs 
needed for CS3. I would think that would hold true even today. What Neil said 
about the nVidia is true. I do see specs on notebooks but not sure about 
ultrabooks that have nVidia graphics. It would be great if you can get one that 
has Cuda cores in the graphics so you can do as you said and add its name to 
the list so you can take advantage of hardware acceleration with the Mercury 
playback engine. Also if you can get one with a SATA port or USB3 so you could 
use a portable external hard drive for video storage, that would see a 
performance boost. 
Good Luck.

Richard

Sent from my iPhone

On Feb 9, 2013, at 5:40 PM, Mike Boom <[email protected]> wrote:

> Thanks for the feedback, Neil -- choices, choices, indeed. I'm not 
> sure I'll have that much choice in graphics cards. I'm just thankful 
> that an ultrabook even has one. I assume I'll be able to tweak the 
> Premiere card file to make Premiere work with whatever is there.
> 
> Mike Boom
> 
> At 11:40 PM 2/8/2013, BEDFORD NEIL wrote:
> >Hi Mike,
> >
> >That Asus seems OK, but the RAID 0 (striping) still won't give you an awful
> >lot of room for editing, but it WILL be fast for normal use!
> >Windows7 and CS6 alone will devour 64GB of this space, not sure about
> >Windows 8 though.
> >
> >Depending upon which SSD's they use, you could find they bottleneck with
> >the inbuilt compression. Normal applications will be fine, but when moving
> >lots of HD video around, the compression can cause 'issues', although AVCHD
> >files should be OK.
> >If you were to swap out the drives for ones like the Sandisk Extreme 480GB,
> >which is recommended for use in the Hyperdeck Shuttle, this has no
> >compression and even alone, out performs most of that capacity.
> >I have one in the editing rig which is more than enough for storage and
> >another in an Acer laptop, which boots from a cold start to usable in 8
> >seconds :-)
> >
> >Whatever you get (there are a LOT of good choices out there nowadays),
> >spend a bit extra and make sure the display IS 1990 X 1080, as the
> >manufacturers sometimes dazzle you with other features.
> >
> >However, if you can find a device with the GeForce GTX 680MX, that has the
> >maximum CUDA cores in a mobile unit (1536), and may be a lot better for
> >rendering than RAID 0 SSD's in the long run or a faster processor.
> >
> >Choices choices....
> >
> >Good luck!
> >
> >Neil.
> >
> >On 9 February 2013 06:43, Mike Boom [email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > > **
> > >
> > >
> > > I'm looking to replace my monstrously large old laptop that I used to
> > > use for editing video in the field with a new ultrabook that I hope
> > > will shed many pounds and still give me a nice bright 1080p display
> > > for working with video. And if it runs Premiere Pro, so much the better.
> > >
> > > Has anyone on the list used Premiere on an ultrabook? How was the
> > > experience? Any recommendations?
> > >
> > > I'm looking for an ultrabook with a 15" screen and 1080p resolution
> > > along with enough graphics firepower to at least display 1080p AVCHD
> > > footage from my Canon XA10 without stuttering. The one that's caught
> > > my eye is the Asus Zenbook UX51V:
> > > http://blog.laptopmag.com/top-10-ultrabooks?slide=10.
> > >
> > > I suppose I might also fall back into the Apple camp and go for a
> > > Macbook Pro to run Premiere. I used a Mac for 16 years, then decamped
> > > in 2000 for Windows when clients demanded it. Anyone with experience
> > > running Premiere Pro on a Macbook Pro?
> > >
> > > Thanks for any feedback,
> > >
> > > Mike Boom
> > >
> > >
> > >
> >
> >
> >[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
> >
> >
> >
> >------------------------------------
> >
> >Yahoo! Groups Links
> >
> >
> >
> 


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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