Laptops and Wings
Hello. I have WingsPlatinum Advanced version. I use a laptop and data projector for showing my Wings projects. I am struggling to find a laptop computer that allows Wings to work properly and flawlessly. It works OK but the sometimes some pictures do not show and I have to go in and out of full screen mode to get them to show. I think I have all the settings correct. Can anyone give me recommendations/specifications for a laptop that will work properly without spending crazy money ? Thanks, Basil Mizrahi, London
Hello Basil,
Read the chapter 'Computer optimisation' of your Wings Platinum Helpfile. At the end of the chapter there is a paragraph about laptop conditions.
Depending on the kind of content you put in your show you sometimes need a better computer, which often can not be fulfilled with standard laptops.
Good luck,
Henk
Read the chapter 'Computer optimisation' of your Wings Platinum Helpfile. At the end of the chapter there is a paragraph about laptop conditions.
Depending on the kind of content you put in your show you sometimes need a better computer, which often can not be fulfilled with standard laptops.
Good luck,
Henk
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Additionally, if I'm not wrong, bear in mind applications like Wings pass all video and picture processing (except for de-coding) on to the GPU of the graphics card. And almost if not all laptops' graphics cards are a cut-down version of the desktop version so performance is not the same as a desktop version. This also goes to say that on-board graphics will also be very limited (I should know, I use one myself - for off-line work), not least of which is the fact that graphics RAM on these on-board units are shared with the motherboard.
That said, you don't need to blow the budget. Just shop for at least an i5 with a more than decent 3rd party graphics card from ATI or nVidia included, and preferably a 7200rpm hard-disk. Dell is probably the best bet as it allows selection of a 7200rpm hd option whereas most other manufacturers don't, except perhaps for the high-end gaming ones. With today's competition and pricing, about US$1,000 or less should get you a decent performer.
When you shop, how about negotiating with the sales guy to allow you to install Wings to try. Alternatively, install Wings into a USB thumb drive to testing on a machine. Should work fine, though haven't tried that myself...yet.
That said, you don't need to blow the budget. Just shop for at least an i5 with a more than decent 3rd party graphics card from ATI or nVidia included, and preferably a 7200rpm hard-disk. Dell is probably the best bet as it allows selection of a 7200rpm hd option whereas most other manufacturers don't, except perhaps for the high-end gaming ones. With today's competition and pricing, about US$1,000 or less should get you a decent performer.
When you shop, how about negotiating with the sales guy to allow you to install Wings to try. Alternatively, install Wings into a USB thumb drive to testing on a machine. Should work fine, though haven't tried that myself...yet.
Thanks for the advice. My lectures are actually more still photo and text based (i'm a dental lecturer). I do however like to incorporate vido clips (MPEG 2) into my lectures. I switched over to Wings from PPt about 2 yrs ago because I was told that PPT does not handle video clips that well. Since then seems PPT has improved for handling video so I think my life would be a lot less stressful if I go back to ppt and use Wings to create nice video clips. I find it much easier to create text and graphic based slides in PPT . I guess Wings is not designed for formal teaching presentations - its more for artistic presentations. Basil
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Hallo Basil,
Fuess Audio Vision have some Information about Laptops for Wings Platinum.
Go to http://www.fuess-av.at
Infocenter has a Drop Down Menu
Click on: PC und Technik für WP 4. At the top is: Tipps zum Laptopkauf, click on >> mehr Infos.
Right Click and Translate with Bing etc; to English.
Karl Füsselberger and his Team are very good, He Teaches Wings Platinum and knows what he
is talking about.
Tom Henderson.
Fuess Audio Vision have some Information about Laptops for Wings Platinum.
Go to http://www.fuess-av.at
Infocenter has a Drop Down Menu
Click on: PC und Technik für WP 4. At the top is: Tipps zum Laptopkauf, click on >> mehr Infos.
Right Click and Translate with Bing etc; to English.
Karl Füsselberger and his Team are very good, He Teaches Wings Platinum and knows what he
is talking about.
Tom Henderson.
Hello Thomas
Thanks for the advice. It seems most high spec gaming laptops only have a 5400rpm hard drive even though the graphic capabilities are very high. Is this a big problem as opposed to a 7200 drive ?
Thanks
Basil
Thanks for the advice. It seems most high spec gaming laptops only have a 5400rpm hard drive even though the graphic capabilities are very high. Is this a big problem as opposed to a 7200 drive ?
Thanks
Basil
ThomasLeong hat geschrieben:Additionally, if I'm not wrong, bear in mind applications like Wings pass all video and picture processing (except for de-coding) on to the GPU of the graphics card. And almost if not all laptops' graphics cards are a cut-down version of the desktop version so performance is not the same as a desktop version. This also goes to say that on-board graphics will also be very limited (I should know, I use one myself - for off-line work), not least of which is the fact that graphics RAM on these on-board units are shared with the motherboard.
That said, you don't need to blow the budget. Just shop for at least an i5 with a more than decent 3rd party graphics card from ATI or nVidia included, and preferably a 7200rpm hard-disk. Dell is probably the best bet as it allows selection of a 7200rpm hd option whereas most other manufacturers don't, except perhaps for the high-end gaming ones. With today's competition and pricing, about US$1,000 or less should get you a decent performer.
When you shop, how about negotiating with the sales guy to allow you to install Wings to try. Alternatively, install Wings into a USB thumb drive to testing on a machine. Should work fine, though haven't tried that myself...yet.
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Dear Alle,
Why buying an old fashioned Hard Disk Drive with (slow) moving parts..? My laptop, which i bought two months ago has 3 Solid State Hard Disks on board with 240 GB each. They are reading 250-300 Mb per second.
Very important is the graphic card. In my laptop i have two NVidia Geforce 280 M cards (1,5 Gygabite memory each), in SLI mode also nearly 3 Gb.
The processor is a Hexacore with 6 cores. It is an amazing machine. There is only one problem... it costs a lot more than 1000 Euro's....
But you can solve your hard-disk problems with buiying SSD's.
Greetings,
Jan Roeleveld
Why buying an old fashioned Hard Disk Drive with (slow) moving parts..? My laptop, which i bought two months ago has 3 Solid State Hard Disks on board with 240 GB each. They are reading 250-300 Mb per second.
Very important is the graphic card. In my laptop i have two NVidia Geforce 280 M cards (1,5 Gygabite memory each), in SLI mode also nearly 3 Gb.
The processor is a Hexacore with 6 cores. It is an amazing machine. There is only one problem... it costs a lot more than 1000 Euro's....
But you can solve your hard-disk problems with buiying SSD's.
Greetings,
Jan Roeleveld
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- Pro User
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Hello Basilmiz,
Thought you were going to stick with Powerpoint? :)
To answer your question, yes a 5400rpm will be slightly lacking versus 7200rpm hd, IF -
1. You play multiple videos simultaneously. Playing just one video at any one time should be ok with a 5400rpm hd.
2. Depending on the other specs of the laptop, you may have difficulty playing a 1920x1080 video smoothly, ie. without jerks. If you do not need HD video, then a lower resolution video should play fine with a 5400rpm hd.
3. Also, you may have to encode any such video at lower bitrates - say no higher than 8000kbps which will give reasonably good quality anyway.
Pictures and titles should not have a problem.
The 'packaged' laptops generally do not advertise a 7200rpm hd option. Try asking whether they have such an option. I googled for 'SATA hdd for laptop' and some sites do offer an upgrade on the hard-disk.
Thomas Leong
Thought you were going to stick with Powerpoint? :)
To answer your question, yes a 5400rpm will be slightly lacking versus 7200rpm hd, IF -
1. You play multiple videos simultaneously. Playing just one video at any one time should be ok with a 5400rpm hd.
2. Depending on the other specs of the laptop, you may have difficulty playing a 1920x1080 video smoothly, ie. without jerks. If you do not need HD video, then a lower resolution video should play fine with a 5400rpm hd.
3. Also, you may have to encode any such video at lower bitrates - say no higher than 8000kbps which will give reasonably good quality anyway.
Pictures and titles should not have a problem.
The 'packaged' laptops generally do not advertise a 7200rpm hd option. Try asking whether they have such an option. I googled for 'SATA hdd for laptop' and some sites do offer an upgrade on the hard-disk.
Thomas Leong
Thanks for the input
I've seen 3 laptops which I'm now considering buying (all about about £1000) .
I lecture to small groups using vidoe and pictures. No Multidisplay needed.
Thanks
Basil
Dell XPS 17
2nd generation Intel® Core™ i5-2520M processor 2.50 GHz with Turbo Boost 2.0 up to 3.20 GHz 487577 1 [210-35181] 1
LCD: 17.3" HD+ WLED True-Life (1600x900) with 2.0 Mega Pixel Integrated Camera 456592 1 [230-11719] 760
Video Card: 3GB NVIDIA® GeForce® GT 555M Graphics Card 487629 1 [490-12666] 6
Memory: 4096MB (2x2GB) 1333MHz DDR3 Dual Channel 487592 1 [370-20114] 3
Hard Drive: 640GB (7,200rpm) Serial ATA Dual HDD - (2x320GB) 456585 1 [400-21855] 8
Mesh Ultima i5 - B laptop
Intel® 32nm Arrandale Core™ Processor i5-460M @ 2.43Ghz-2.66Ghz Max Turbo
No OS Installed
15.6" HD LED (1920 x 1080) 16:9 Widescreen Super Glossy Display
1GB GDDR5 ATI Radeon HD5870 - DX11
6GB DDR3 1066MHz Notebook Memory
1TB Serial ATA Fast 2.5" Notebook Hard Drive 5400rpm
MSI GX660
CPU Intel Core™ i5-460M 2.53GHz Processor
OS Genuine Windows 7 Home Premium
Chipset Intel PM55
Memory 6GB DDR3 1066 MHz
LCD Size 15.6" FHD 1920*1080 TFT-LCD Display (LED Backlight)
Graphics ATi Mobility Radeon HD 5870M
Graphics VRAM GDDR5 1GB
HDD 2x500GB in RAID 0 SATA
Which one seems a better buy ?
Thanks
Basil
I've seen 3 laptops which I'm now considering buying (all about about £1000) .
I lecture to small groups using vidoe and pictures. No Multidisplay needed.
Thanks
Basil
Dell XPS 17
2nd generation Intel® Core™ i5-2520M processor 2.50 GHz with Turbo Boost 2.0 up to 3.20 GHz 487577 1 [210-35181] 1
LCD: 17.3" HD+ WLED True-Life (1600x900) with 2.0 Mega Pixel Integrated Camera 456592 1 [230-11719] 760
Video Card: 3GB NVIDIA® GeForce® GT 555M Graphics Card 487629 1 [490-12666] 6
Memory: 4096MB (2x2GB) 1333MHz DDR3 Dual Channel 487592 1 [370-20114] 3
Hard Drive: 640GB (7,200rpm) Serial ATA Dual HDD - (2x320GB) 456585 1 [400-21855] 8
Mesh Ultima i5 - B laptop
Intel® 32nm Arrandale Core™ Processor i5-460M @ 2.43Ghz-2.66Ghz Max Turbo
No OS Installed
15.6" HD LED (1920 x 1080) 16:9 Widescreen Super Glossy Display
1GB GDDR5 ATI Radeon HD5870 - DX11
6GB DDR3 1066MHz Notebook Memory
1TB Serial ATA Fast 2.5" Notebook Hard Drive 5400rpm
MSI GX660
CPU Intel Core™ i5-460M 2.53GHz Processor
OS Genuine Windows 7 Home Premium
Chipset Intel PM55
Memory 6GB DDR3 1066 MHz
LCD Size 15.6" FHD 1920*1080 TFT-LCD Display (LED Backlight)
Graphics ATi Mobility Radeon HD 5870M
Graphics VRAM GDDR5 1GB
HDD 2x500GB in RAID 0 SATA
Which one seems a better buy ?
Thanks
Basil
Zuletzt geändert von Basilmiz am 12. Jun 2011, 08:36, insgesamt 1-mal geändert.
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Googling for the i5 2520M and the GeForce® GT 555M indicates quite good performance for both items.
If the price difference is not much, and affordable, I would only up the i5 to the i7.
Thomas Leong
If the price difference is not much, and affordable, I would only up the i5 to the i7.
Thomas Leong