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Final Cut Pro 6 and Compressor 3: Originally posted June 1st, 2007 by rob-ART
morgan, mad scientist Many of you are curious if the latest version of Final Cut Studio (Final Cut Pro 6, Compressor 3, etc.) takes advantage of the 8-core Mac Pro's full performance potential. The short answer? Yes. We ran various rendering tests with Final Cut Pro 6 and Compressor 3. We saw as high as 527% CPU usage with only one task (Compressor 3) active: Any time you register over 400% CPU usage for an individual task, it's very likely that having more than 4 cores in your Mac Pro will be an advantage. We say "likely" because we've seen instances where the 8-core reported higher CPU usage than the 4-core but only finished the task slightly faster. This is partly due to memory bus bottleneck earlier reported. VIRTUAL CLUSTERING You may wonder if defining 8 instances (and using all 8 cores) would give even faster times than 4 instances. And I'm sure you wonder how a 4-core Mac Pro compares to an 8-core Mac Pro running Compressor 3. We did too. MULTI-TASKING RECOMMENDATION In a previous article we showed how After Effects CS3 does its own version of virtual clustering, creating 8 sub-processes each of which gobbled up 1.5GB per process while rendering our sample (for a total of 12GB of real memory used out of 16GB). Some have asked if the speed increase justifies the higher initial price of the 8-core compared to the 4-core Mac Pro. That's debatable depending on how you use your Mac. However, if you calculate how much your time is worth while waiting for a Compressor 3 or After Effects CS3 rendering task to finish, then the lifetime advantage of the 8-core likely outweighs the initial cost disadvantage. MORE SPEED TESTING OF THE 8-core Pure CPU Crunching on the 8-core versus 4-core Mac Pro using Cinebench, Geekbench, Photoshop CS3, Aperture, and QuickTime Player Multiprocessing (Simultaneous rendering by Final Cut Pro, Motion, iDVD, and Photoshop CS3) After Effects CS3 -- the first application to use all 8 cores and all 16GB of RAM on the Mac Pro 3D Gaming (Quake 4, Doom 3, Unreal Tournament 2004, Halo, World of Warcraft, Prey) using three different graphics cards WHERE TO BUY FINAL CUT PRO STUDIO and/or an 8-Core Mac Pro You can also purchase Apple systems and accessories from Small Dog Electronics. You can configure-to-order through them just like on the Apple Store. WHERE TO BUY MEMORY FOR YOUR 8-CORE MAC PRO We have tested both 2GB and 1GB modules from Other World Computing in our 8-core Mac Pro. They offer a "Trade In Your Factory Memory" REBATE program. TransIntl.com designed their own heat sinks with 6 cooling fins on each side (versus 4 on the Apple factory modules) using a special aluminum alloy. We have tested their 1GB and 2GB and 4GB modules in our 8-core Mac Pro. We have tested MaxUpgrades' memory in our 4-core. They assured us that they have tested their memory on their 8-core Mac Pro without any errors and crashes. They also sell their heat sinks separately as well as a memory cooling kit called "max_flo." WHAT GRAPHICS CARD SHOULD YOU BUY FOR THE 8-CORE or 4-CORE? Has Bare Feats helped you? How about helping Bare Feats? © 1995 - 2007 Rob Art Morgan |