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#26 |
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I had no problems before the firmware update that I could detect. After I did the firmware update, I had to hard reboot, because my receiver stopped detecting a DTS signal from any file with DTS audio I would play. At the same time, some of my external hard drives were not detected. I turned off the receiver, unplugged the HDMI cable from the TV, leaving the main monitor hooked up, shut down the Mini, turned on the receiver, powered the mini on. Once it was up, I plugged the TV back in, and DTS worked again. The drives were also detected.
I am posting this in case anyone else runs into these issues. |
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#27 |
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How are you guys testing the colours? Just using your eye sight or using calibration hardware/software?
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#28 | |
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You should consider getting help on a photo forum such as DPReview.com or another pro-oriented forum with other Photoshop users. You will obtain more knowledgeable feedback from people who actually use the same software under similar conditions... |
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#29 | |
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The problem people are reporting with bad colors is clearly a bug where the Mini "thinks" it's connected to a TV and does some sort of unnecessary and detrimental adjustment/compensation. If you aren't suffering from this bug then you can't possibly get better graphics than what the Mini gives you. (Unless by "graphics" you are talking about 3-D rendering performance.) |
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#30 | |
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Anyway this is last year's mini, so somewhat off-topic for this thread. I just wanted to support Philipma's assertion that Mac minis are limited for photographic applications. |
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#31 |
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Just installed remotely, can't wait to get home tonight and see if it helped.
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#32 | |
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Well, that would be a problem than for photographers - while the machine in general seems to be a very good solution for folks like me. Is this an issue with all monitors and ways to plug them in? I'm looking to either get a Dell 27" or two Dell or NEC 24". I use the X-rite Colormunki for calibration. Can anyone confirm that this would still be a problem?
__________________
iPhone 5, iPod classic 160gbDell PC; IBM ThinkPad T60 laptop |
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#33 | |
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As I suggested earlier, you could use some expert advice. You probably won't get it here... As far as the HDMI bug goes, if you connect to a display using a Display Port to Mini DP adapter there won't be a problem. My NEC display has four different ports so I'm not limited to HDMI. I've had no display problems and the color is spot-on using the stock NEC profile for my display. I don't even need to calibrate the monitor. |
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#34 | |||
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Is limited due to the nature of forum "speak" I Like mac minis I use mac minis. I sell them I upgrade them and I repair them. For size only the asrock models come close and they break a lot in comparison to mac minis. Mac minis have come a long way even in picture quality. They still fall short of really good graphics. Really good means you can do it all at least in the top 20 % of each and every category . So if I want really good gpu card performance with a large screen in legal (no hackintosh) mountain lion use. I need a mac pro. Or I can use the mac mini for all but my video needs. and for video, graphics, picture quality,gaming I use a diy pc. I just find it annoying. I can build 3 of these machines. using hd7970's in them and i7-3770k's for the price of 1 six core mac pro. let check price to be sure. a six core mac pro is 3 k. add a diy ssd and more ram and you are at 3.5k. I can build those window machines at 1.2k. so close enough Last edited by philipma1957; Dec 11, 2012 at 02:29 PM. |
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#36 |
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It's easy enough to check your RAM and verify if you are running out; even 16GB won't be enough if you have enough apps and files open with heavy editing going on.
My editing needs are modest so the HD4000 is fine. Photographers who do extensive edits, work with large files and do video... I don't consider the Mini to be the Mac for the job. Let's face it: the Mini is not designed to be a pro machine. It's amazing how much it has evolved and how capable it is... and how little it costs. But if you rely on professional apps and push them hard then the iMac, MacBookPro and MacPro are what you should be using. Even if Apple retained the discrete GPU option the Mini would be relatively anemic compared to its beefier brethren based on Apple's past designs. It's too bad the company won't offer a so-called "headless iMac" for those who need more than a Mini can offer and who don't want an all-in-one computer or a top of-the-line tower Mac. |
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#37 | ||
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Are you using an SSD? That might give you a pretty huge performance boost. Another thing is that recent versions of Photoshop might have gotten slower. I used to use a version of Photoshop that was > 5 years old, and when I updated to the latest one I noticed a pretty big slowdown. Bloat, I guess. ---------- Quote:
Otherwise GPU performance is basically irrelevant, and the Mini will be just as fast at almost everything as a MacBook Pro or a Mac Pro from 2010 or earlier. You have to step up to an 8 or 12 core Mac Pro to get something that's significantly faster than the 2.6 Mini. I'm not trying to say the Mini is the best thing you can buy, but to give things a little perspective, the high end Mini today is faster than basically any Mac you could have bought 2-3 years ago, and people were using Macs 2-3 years ago just fine to do HD video editing, high end photography, etc. etc. |
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#38 |
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No black screen since the patch!
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#39 |
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Set up my 2012 Mini Nov 26th using HDMI to DVI adapter....didn't notice any blackouts, flickers, whatever since then. I do have the "crushed whites" issue but haven't tried any calibration (monitor is in PC mode though so it's not that). Installed the EFI update last night...no problems yet (but I didn't have any before either)....colors seem a little better, but still not great.
__________________
2012 2.3GHz i7 Mini, 16GB RAM; 2009 2.93 GHz C2D iMac, 8GB RAM, 640GB HD, GT120 1.83 GHz CD Mini, 2GB RAM, 200GB HD; 800 MHz 17" G4 iMac, 1GB RAM, 120GB HD 32GB White iPhone 4S, 32GB White iPad2 |
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#40 |
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#41 |
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I cannot install the update, I download it and when I try to install it it tells me I have the "wrong package" or something to that effect.
What am I doing wrong ? |
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#42 | |
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The test results can be found at http://barefeats.com/minivim.html. The article includes video editing tests. |
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#43 | |
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#44 | |
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I'm using PS CS5 on a '07 macbook C2D. I discovered the GMA950 in there doesn't do OpenGL and unable to perform a simple task like rotate document. (I mean, I could do that in Painter on my 15 year old 7600 for crikes sake) I'm looking at an i7 mini now. Extra 10 seconds is fine. I'm concerned that the HD4000 can do whatever document handling features there are. Unfortunately Adobe lists a recommended Intel HD3000P and HD4000P but not a plain old HD4000. Confusing |
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#45 |
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Regardless of whether it's a graphics card issue, an OS graphics driver issue, or bloated Adobe software issue, Photoshop CS6 on my 2011 mini (AMD graphics, 16Gb RAM) is a graphically compromised environment - laggy zooming, slow-to-update previews in ACR, and disappearing brush cursors. It's usable, but far from ideal.
The Mac Pro won't work for me as it doesn't have Thunderbolt. The Imac won't work as I need to use my Eizo screen (and don't need a second screen). Nearly all my photographer friends use Macbook Pros, and that's probably the most sensible solution. But at present my 2011 Air solves most of my portable needs and I'd like to see a mini working well. As soon as the HDMI issues are resolved I'll try the new mini. |
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#46 |
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The reason the rMBP is a little faster on most of those benchmarks is almost certainly because it has an SSD.
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#47 | |
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Iris Blur Isn't The Only CS6 GPU-Based Function...
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Here is a list of CS6 processes that utilize OpenCL acceleration: Adaptive Wide Angle Filter (compatible video card required) Liquify (accelerated by compatible video card with 512 MB of VRAM) Oil Paint (compatible video card required) Warp and Puppet Warp (accelerated by compatible video card) Field Blur, Iris Blur, and Tilt/Shift (accelerated by compatible video card supporting OpenCL) Lighting Effects Gallery (compatible video card required with 512 MB of VRAM) New 3D enhancements (3D features in Photoshop require a compatible video card with 512 MB of VRAM): Draggable Shadows Ground plane reflections Roughness On-canvas user interface controls Ground plane Light widgets on edge of canvas IBL (image-based light) controller There is a long list of GPU features that were introduced in previous versions at http://helpx.adobe.com/photoshop/kb/...l#cs6_features. |
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#48 |
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Thanks fellas
I did plan on a mini with the fusion drive if that helps. I figure the i7 2.6 quad w/16gb will do me for a good 5 or more years. Hell, I went with a '96 7600&8600 over 10 years till I sprung for the 2007 macbook! I'm not much on effects anyway... I like a photograph to look like a photograph. ![]() I also do home recording and use Logic among other things. It is more on the audio side of things that I could use more power now. If it was just for photography and photoshop, the macbook I have now is plenty. Not sure if I'm going to CS6 either. I went from PS5 to CS5. Adobe is out of control. I'm hoping they'll cave on this 'you have to upgrade on every release or pay full price' garbage I've been hearing about. Probably do LR3 to 4 though... its cheap Last edited by BingClawsby; Dec 13, 2012 at 07:37 PM. |
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