Hi Rob,
I am chasing an SSD for my computer. Should I get a usb 3 or thunderbolt connection?
Terry
I am chasing an SSD for my computer. Should I get a usb 3 or thunderbolt connection?
Terry
What is the computer model?Hi Rob,
I am chasing an SSD for my computer. Should I get a usb 3 or thunderbolt connection?
Terry
Looks like you don't have Sata 3. Looks like you need to use external Thunderbolt connection, which apparently is much better than USB 3, which is your other option.iMac 14.2
Looks like you don't have Sata 3. Looks like you need to use external Thunderbolt connection, which apparently is much better than USB 3, which is your other option.
Your computer
iMac (27-inch, Late 2013) - Technical Specifications
USB 3 vs. Thunderbolt
USB 3.0 vs. Thunderbolt review | ZDNet
You mean external ports? Yes - Thunderbolt seems like the best option.I have thunderbolt slots. And, I can change my order and get an SSD to use thunderbolt connection.
Will I really see the difference over a USB3 connection?You mean external ports? Yes - Thunderbolt seems like the best option.
You might not as it appears you have Thunderbolt version 1Will I really see the difference over a USB3 connection?
Gosh, that's over my head. Did I make the right purchase?Premier makes use of Proxies so the actual editing will be relatively fast, but rendering will take a while.
Thank you so much for your help.No, Premier is a great program. 4K video is hard on computers and some programs can generate a "proxie" which is at a lower resolution, so you can do all of your editing much faster. When you render the file to final output is renders in the codec you have chosen (4k, 1080P or whatever) it uses the 4K files to generate your rendered file.
YES thisWhen in Premier (and most other NLE's) you save a file that is all of your edit commands, when you want a file that is a video file that contains all of your edits you "render" it to a file that shows all of the things you did to it (color correction, titles, music, voice overs, ect.) as a final video. Hopes this makes sense. You want your original files on a different drive than the one you "render" to.
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