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Current using software: Adobe Photoshop cc | Adobe Lightroom cc |Adobe Illustrator cc | Adobe After effect cc | Adobe Premiere Pro cc | Adobe Media Encoder cc | Corel draw | Protools le 8 | DaVinci Resolve 14 (only software) | Cinema 4d
Windows 7 ultimate 64bit service pack 1
motherboard: ASUS H110m-k
Processor: Intel core i5-6400 6Gen
Ram: 8+8=16Gb
Graphics card: Geforce Gt610
How to fix very slow rendering speed
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[moved from Adobe Creative Cloud to Hardware Forum]
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Simple. Upgrade your GPU ASAP. That GT 610 is SEVERELY mismatched to any modern CPU to begin with: It is not only a very-low-end GPU, but it's also a Fermi (GF119-based) GPU with only 48 CUDA cores and a memory throughput of only about 15 GB/s whose support has been placed into "legacy" status by Nvidia. And when a GPU is substantially weaker than a CPU, it will negatively impact even that system's CPU-only performance.
With that i5-6400 and 16GB of RAM, your best upgrade for a GPU, if you must buy one now, would be a GTX 1050 Ti with 4GB of graphics RAM. But if you can't afford a GTX 1050 Ti or even a GTX 1050, then even a GT 1030 would be a substantial improvement over your current GT 610. And if you do go with a GT 1030, make sure that you buy the original GDDR5 version of that GPU and not the newer, weaker DDR4 version of that GPU as the latter will not be sufficiently faster than your current GT 610 to justify its street price.
In addition, you did not tell us how many disks or what type of disks you're using in that system. Unfortunately, the H110 chipset severely restricts your internal expansion capabilities because it has no native m.2 SSD support and only PCIe 2.0-capable expansion slots outside of the primary PCIe 3.0 x16 slot that's in use by a discrete GPU.
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can I buy Afox GeForce GTX1050 Ti (h2) Graphics card
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can I buy Afox GeForce GTX1050 Ti (h2) Graphics card
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You could, but I do not trust that vendor (card brand) due to unknown technical support quality: If something goes wrong with the installation and/or drivers, then you're more likely to get bounced back and forth between multiple companies and vendors.
If you must buy a new graphics card, then stick with the better-known brands such as Asus or eVGA.