[hugin-ptx] Re: Hugin system recommendation for the future?

2009-09-07 Thread Zoran Zorkic
On Sep 7, 10:50 pm, Bruno Postle wrote: > > i.e. get a system with lots of memory and create a ramdisk for > temporary files.  You don't need any expensive solid-state > persistent storage. And/or get a regular RAID0 or preferably RAID5. With 6 cheap drives it should net you >500mb/s transfers a

[hugin-ptx] Re: Hugin system recommendation for the future?

2009-09-07 Thread Bruno Postle
On Mon 07-Sep-2009 at 14:09 +0200, Seb Perez-D wrote: > >One thing that is slow is writing the TIF files produced by nona and >reading them again by enblend. One way to speed the process would be >to ensure that everything stays in RAM. With enough memory this could >be done. i.e. get a system wi

[hugin-ptx] Re: Hugin system recommendation for the future?

2009-09-07 Thread Yuval Levy
Seb Perez-D wrote: > One thing that is slow is writing the TIF files produced by nona and > reading them again by enblend. One way to speed the process would be > to ensure that everything stays in RAM. With enough memory this could > be done. or with

[hugin-ptx] Re: Hugin system recommendation for the future?

2009-09-07 Thread Seb Perez-D
On Mon, Sep 7, 2009 at 13:15, Zoran Zorkic wrote: > On Sep 7, 12:45 pm, Seb Perez-D wrote: > >> I've read (and I believe it is true) that a very very hard drive is >> needed - some setups that have been mentioned in PanotoolsNG have >> several fast drives acting as one without redundancies. > > I

[hugin-ptx] Re: Hugin system recommendation for the future?

2009-09-07 Thread Zoran Zorkic
On Sep 7, 12:45 pm, Seb Perez-D wrote: > I've read (and I believe it is true) that a very very hard drive is > needed - some setups that have been mentioned in PanotoolsNG have > several fast drives acting as one without redundancies. It helps when your system runs out of memory and has to sw

[hugin-ptx] Re: Hugin system recommendation for the future?

2009-09-07 Thread Seb Perez-D
On Mon, Sep 7, 2009 at 12:22, Oskar Sander wrote: > How does an ideal Hugin system look like (for example Windows) going > forward?   I suppose huge amounts of memory is still good, but how does > other factors rank (i.e. multiple cores, GPU etc)? I've read (and I believe it is true) that a very