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Will the following system run Premier Pro and Photoshop Efficiently? It matches the recommended specs but sometimes the recommended specs can be misleading.
OS: Windows 11
Processor: Intel 15-1145G7 @ 2.6GHz
Graphics: Integrated Iris Xe Graphics
RAM: 16GB
SSD: 256GB
Thanks for your help!
I agree with many of the concerns already expressed:
16GB RAM means after Windows and Premiere Pro take the RAM they need, there won’t be a lot left over for graphics acceleration with the Intel Integrated Xe Graphics. This is a double whammy against GPU acceleration, because in addition to integrated graphics not being preferred (discrete is better), the integrated graphics could end up starved for graphics memory. And therefore could run more slowly.
256GB storage means that after you subt
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You need a dedicated graphics card. The processor may be a bit weak, depending upon your media.
The hard drive is small. Will you be using any other fast drives?
See here:
https://helpx.adobe.com/premiere-pro/system-requirements.html
and here:
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Probably just using the internal drive. Will Premier Pro just not run without a dedicated video card or will it run but just be painfully slow?
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Probably just using the internal drive.
By @David25030657l630
You will have problems unless your videos are SD and only a few minutes long.
I recommend at least 120 GB free drive space available, not including space for the Media Cache.
Will Premier Pro just not run without a dedicated video card or will it run but just be painfully slow?
By @David25030657l630
Either could happen.
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Moved from the Premiere Pro forum to the Video Hardware forum.
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I echo Peru Bob. The lack of a discrete GPU is not by itself the biggest problem. It's that the integrated GPU steals so much system RAM for itself that the system may not be left with a sufficient amount of available (unused) system RAM to even run Premiere Pro properly, if at all. In the worst cases, the iGPU steals more than 10 GB of that 16 GB of system RAM, leaving you with only about 5 GB of RAM total available for the operating system and programs! Premiere Pro really works best with well over 16 GB of free, unused system RAM.
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I agree with many of the concerns already expressed:
16GB RAM means after Windows and Premiere Pro take the RAM they need, there won’t be a lot left over for graphics acceleration with the Intel Integrated Xe Graphics. This is a double whammy against GPU acceleration, because in addition to integrated graphics not being preferred (discrete is better), the integrated graphics could end up starved for graphics memory. And therefore could run more slowly.
256GB storage means that after you subtract the amount of space needed for Windows, to install Adobe Creative Cloud apps, and to load your photo and video files, how much is left over? Probably not a lot, if it’s under 100GB free space. That is a major danger sign for both Premiere Pro Media Cache and Photoshop scratch disk files. Both are performance caches requiring large amounts of space, and are likely to run out of space very quickly if only given what’s left over from just 256GB internal storage. If your performance caches have no room, the application can’t take advantage of them and slows down.
I cannot imagine using a computer with less than 512GB internal storage for Photoshop and Premiere Pro unless large amounts of external storage are used for photo and video media. (In my last three laptops, I used 1TB internal storage and lots of external storage.)
It’s always useful to look up a review or two while keeping the special demands of graphics/video editing in mind. The Notebookcheck review of this laptop has this to say in the Processor section:
In the Cinebench R15 stress test, the EliteBook 850 G8 takes last place in our comparison chart.…The multi-core benchmarks reveal that the EliteBook 850 G8 is not meant for taxing workloads.
In the Temperature section:
Under load, the CPU can throttle so hard that the CPU frequency falls below the base clock. If users try to run demanding applications for an extended period of time on the HP laptop, the CPU performance may drop significantly.
Neither of those quotes is what you want to hear if you’re going to edit video.
With laptops, the cooling system is critical. Because of the constrained space, if the CPU requires too much power (generates too much heat), and/or the cooling system can’t shed the heat fast enough, the CPU must throttle down, so if you put the fastest CPU in there it might not matter if it can only go as fast as the cooling system allows.
I think a huge clue is that the review calls it a “business laptop.” That means it’s great for Microsoft Office work and such. Emails and spreadsheets. It is not designed to be a “graphics workstation” which would have a more powerful GPU, better cooling, etc.
Also, the linked review points out that the laptop’s screen almost covers the sRGB color gamut. That could be OK if you edit video for Rec.709, but the screen falls well short of covering the Adobe RGB or P3 color gamuts, so if those are requirements for your Photoshop or Premiere Pro editing, cross this laptop off your list.