On Tue, 27 Dec 2011, Zane H. Healy wrote:
At 2:52 PM -0800 12/27/11, Cameron Kaiser wrote:
I still think there is a lot of life in Power
Macs. My two main desktop
machines and my main laptop are all PowerPC (G5, iMac G4 and late iBook
G4).
I plan to get at least 10 years out of my quad, and I have a spare unit
identically configured, just in case.
Depending on your requirements, that sounds reasonable. I managed to get
nearly 7 years out of my Rev.0 Dual 2Ghz G5 PowerMac, and I'm a heavy
Photoshop user. Granted I was ready to replace it at about 5 years, but
limped on for a couple more. My primary problem was I needed more RAM (I had
7 of the 8Gb possible). The hardware finally gave out on me (the onboard
ethernet died about 3 years before the rest of the system).
Interestingly enough I now have a late-2010 8-core Mac Pro, and with only 6Gb
of RAM, it was slower than the G5. With 24Gb of RAM it's normally pretty
speedy and I can't put a load on it, though I must confess I've started
pricing what it will take to get to 48Gb.
Right now it's running Adobe Bridge, Photoshop, Lightroom, InDesign, and
Acrobat as well as Phase One's Capture One, and a few other things. My
performance issues are strictly related to RAM and Disk I/O. Actually the
main performance problem is these **** HD's that go to sleep on their own
when not being used, and there doesn't seem to be a way to turn off that
behavior!
Zane
--
| Zane H. Healy | UNIX Systems Administrator |
| healyzh at
aracnet.com | OpenVMS Enthusiast |
| | Photographer |
+----------------------------------+----------------------------+
| My flickr Photostream |
|
http://www.flickr.com/photos/33848088 at N03/ |
You could always switch to SSDs, but it may cost more to get a SCSI
SSD than a new computer would cost....
Clint