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Will Premiere pro work well in Core i3-8th gen?

New Here ,
Oct 31, 2019 Oct 31, 2019

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I am planning to buy a laptop with:

Intel core i3-8th gen ( i3-8130u)

8gn of ddr4 ram

Integrated Intel HD Graphics 620

CPU with 2.2 GHz to 4 GHz 

 

I will be editing 1080p videos on it. Will this laptop handle the editing , color grading and other works of premiere pro efficiently ?

Somebody help me to know please.

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correct answers 1 Correct answer

LEGEND , Oct 31, 2019 Oct 31, 2019

With that laptop your editing experience will be rather frustratingly sluggish: All mobile i3 CPUs are still only dual-core, which I had already demonstrated a couple of years ago to be woefully inadequate for even 1080p/23.976, let alone 4k, video editing.

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Community Expert ,
Oct 31, 2019 Oct 31, 2019

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I think this will turn out to be a BIG disappointment.

Adobe Premiere Pro CC System Requirements

 

Please do not double post! Other thread deleted.

 

 

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Community Expert ,
Oct 31, 2019 Oct 31, 2019

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Short answer: No it will not.

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LEGEND ,
Oct 31, 2019 Oct 31, 2019

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With that laptop your editing experience will be rather frustratingly sluggish: All mobile i3 CPUs are still only dual-core, which I had already demonstrated a couple of years ago to be woefully inadequate for even 1080p/23.976, let alone 4k, video editing.

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LEGEND ,
Oct 31, 2019 Oct 31, 2019

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It will work about as well as entering a Yugo in the Daytona 500

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Community Expert ,
Oct 31, 2019 Oct 31, 2019

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Moved to the Hardware Forum.

And I have to agree: Don't even try to use that for Premiere Pro.  It won't even run Premiere Elements well.

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New Here ,
Aug 02, 2023 Aug 02, 2023

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to anyone who sees this in 2023 Eveyone else is wrong, 100% you can do it, it's not gonna be as smooth as using an i5 or i7 but it can get the job done, highly recommend doing 720P over 1080 if you can tho

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LEGEND ,
Aug 02, 2023 Aug 02, 2023

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And even that works best if that laptop has a discrete GPU even though that GPU might not be utilized to its fullest. However, it might not perform well if only integrated graphics is available, especially if that laptop has only 8 GB of total system RAM. And what's more, newer versions of Premiere Pro now eat up so much graphics RAM that there may not be enough available system RAM left to run Premiere Pro properly.

 

And it's becoming even more relevant in 2023 and beyond because Intel itself had placed the support of all integrated graphics processors older than the ones in the 11th-Gen CPUs into legacy status, which means that there will be no more new compatibility fixes while only critical security fixes will continue. And a forthcoming release of Premiere Pro will no longer support the integrated graphics of any 7th-through-10th Gen Intel CPU at all (6th-Gen Intel CPUs had already reached EOSL on December 30 of last year).

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Community Expert ,
Aug 03, 2023 Aug 03, 2023

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You replied to a 4-year-old thread, so although someone might have gotten away with an 8th gen Core i3 in 2019, it’s not a good idea today. four years later.

 

Everyone else isn’t wrong, the original question asked “will this laptop handle the editing , color grading and other works of premiere pro efficiently?”

 

You are right that it will “handle it” but everyone else is more right that it will not handle it “efficiently” which was part of the original question. For example, the ease of color grading and other key features are now highly dependent on the GPU, and 8th gen integrated graphics won’t cut it (there will be lag and low frame rates). Especially integrated graphics on only 8GB RAM! And just two CPU cores!

 

I know this because my previous laptop is an 8th gen Intel quad core with integrated graphics, and a Core i5, so a step up from what was asked about, and the experience in Premiere Pro was definitely marginal. It got a bit better when I attached an external GPU to it, but nothing improved the experience as much as just getting a current laptop with lots of memory, lots of cores, and decent graphics hardware.

 

The nail in the coffin was when you said you highly recommend 720P. That might have been workable in 2019, but today even affordable phones, action cameras, and drones capture video at 4K, and there is a wide expectation now for 2K and higher delivery. Using an old laptop is technically possible, but only really practical for people with basic, non-commercial needs and a lot of time and patience.

 

Some of the burden can be relieved by using proxies…but then you have to generate proxies and wait until that’s done, and proxy generation is very slow on a dual core 8th generation Core i3 with integrated graphics.

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New Here ,
Oct 07, 2024 Oct 07, 2024

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It will work fine even i use i3 11th gen cpu with the similar specs just i recommend using of nvme ssd so that it would be fast.I even have edited 4k videos on it.  I actually started liearning it now and i am making full flegid 4k videos 

[edited by moderator]

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