Salena Posted Thursday at 10:44 PM Posted Thursday at 10:44 PM Hi Brian, I'm in the market for a new pc. Going to get a desktop now that I'm able to (sitting in one place rather than moving around). I have read your article about buying a computer in 2025 which is great thank you. I am wondering about the graphics card. You say 4070 or 4080. I have come across a computer that has all the other specs you mentioned but for the graphics it says this: NVIDIA Quadro RTX 4000 8GB High end 3D cards is this a no go or is it just totally different? I've googled it and it says released 2018 compared with the others being more recent. So that makes me think it's a no, but curious if I should just pass on it. Cheers, Salena
Brian Posted Thursday at 11:38 PM Posted Thursday at 11:38 PM I'm so glad you asked, because I'm going to save you a bunch of money that you would have wasted. Quick Answer: SKIP THAT CARD!! Or, "That's a NO from me dog..." Take a look at PassMark's Software Video Card List for Photoshop. That website Adobe themselves links to for a list of Graphics Cards that have been tested with Photoshop. At this point in 2025, you want a PC Benchmark Score of 10,000 or better. As you can see, that graphics card rates as follows: My Radeon Card in my 2017 iMac performs better that that NVIDIA, and it's barely keeping up with PS CC 2023!! I won't dare attempting PS CC 2024, let alone PS CC 2025 with my current graphics card. So yeah, I know it sucks that things cost as much as they do, but I honestly hate wasting money on this shit. 1
Salena Posted Thursday at 11:56 PM Author Posted Thursday at 11:56 PM Thank you Brian. Are these easy things to change? Wondering if I could ask them to upgrade that part or is that not a thing? It seems like a really great price other than that. https://nzpcclearance.co.nz/product/dell-precision-t5820-xeon-w-2104/
Salena Posted Thursday at 11:59 PM Author Posted Thursday at 11:59 PM OMG my current card is scoring 437 hahaha no wonder it is slow haha 2
Brian Posted yesterday at 03:36 AM Posted yesterday at 03:36 AM That PC is not for Photoshop. AT ALL. Find another one. You do not need or have the software that will take advantage of a Intel Xeon Processor. In fact, Photoshop will likely run SLOWER. You aren't running some sort of Database Server with Windows Server 2019 with multiple CPUs with multiple cores on each processor. LOL!! No wonder why it has that video card. This computer was a Corporate Workstation or even a Server in a former life. Business-class software. Number-Crunching. Not Photoshop. This is like looking to purchase a Bulldozer when all you want to do is plant a small garden next to your house. Sure, a Bulldozer will work, but...why? 1
Salena Posted yesterday at 03:38 AM Author Posted yesterday at 03:38 AM Thanks Brian really appreciate it!
Brian Posted yesterday at 03:42 AM Posted yesterday at 03:42 AM Keep searching. Run the specs by me 1st. Avoid Xeon Processors for what you want to do with Photoshop. Look for current versions of Intel i7 or i9 CPUs. Oh, to answer your question, upgrading a video card is a slippery slope. The new cards are physically huge so you might have to buy a new computer case to house it. They also have all sorts of power requirements. So not only do you need to upgrade the Video Card, but it's also very likely you are upgrading the Power Supply to handle it. Then you have to make sure your motherboard will support a newer card, so you might have to replace that. Then the RAM to work with a new Motherboard. Then a CPU that's compatible... ...basically a video card can snowball into a whole computer build if you aren't careful. But yes, it can be done - but at what cost?
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