99 Questions on Photos, Movies & Music
-
Best Answer
Hi
Flash storage is essentially a really big USB memory stick instead of using a standard Hard Drive which stores information on disks inside the drive. here are the Pros/cons to flash:-
Faster to access information from the drive
More realiable as they have a lower failure rate
Even more reliable as if the mac is dropped beyond repair you stand a very good chance of recovering your information without issue as their are no disks inside which are usually shattered/scratched resulting in a loss of information
help to make a unit lighter and more portable due to small size
Expensive
Small sizes
hope this helps- Answered by Simon F from Darwen
- 9-Oct-2012
- Flag as inappropriate
-
Best Answer
The brand new models do not. You can use any external USB based optical drive with them, including the USB SuperDrive that Apple makes.
All of the previous models (prior to 2012) have optical drives, with the slot on the side of the computer.- Answered by Christina T from Lake Oswego
- 5-Dec-2012
- Flag as inappropriate
-
Does Nikon offer a version of Nikon Image Space for Mac Computers?
- Asked by Peggy Y from Wauwatosa
- 12-Jun-2013
- Flag as inappropriate
-
Does Mac Mini work well with music recording softwares such as protools?
- Asked by Babak K from Miami
- 16-Jun-2013
- Flag as inappropriate
-
Which is better for photo editing, i7 with 1 gig vid card or i5 with 2 gig vid card
- Asked by Edward C from Ludlow
- 21-May-2013
- Flag as inappropriate
AnswerI personally would go with the 2gig video card. The 2gig has more VRAM and the difference between the i5 and i7 is somewhat minimal if they run at the same clock speed.
- Answered by Whipp K from Kiawah Island
- 21-May-2013
- Flag as inappropriate
-
Should I buy a iMac or a MacBook Pro with retina display?
I am going into college this year and I am going to study film and photography. Which one would be better for doing school work, editing photos, and editing movies?
Thank you.- Asked by Erika R from Austin
- 7-Jun-2013
- Flag as inappropriate
-
Does Final Cut X work on Refurbished 13.3-inch MacBook Pro 2.9GHz Dual-core Intel i7 or Refurbished 15.4-inch MacBook Pro 2.6GHz Quad-core Intel i7
I was looking at these refurbished Macbook Pros as a possibility for a purchase. I would then be hoping to soon afterwards purchase Logic Pro 9 and Final Cut Pro X to run on it. Will either Macbook run them? If so, will there be any issues? Any information will be greatly appreciated. Thanks!
- Asked by Christine F from Davis
- 8-Jun-2013
- Flag as inappropriate
-
Mac book pro or Mac book air?
I'm looking at getting a new laptop and wanting to get an apple! I have been tossing up between the Mac book air or pro (ex retina) taking in to consideration weight of the computer. All I will be using it for is - movies, tv shows, music, photos and the use of Microsoft office, also will i be able to plug in my 1tb external hard which I have my photos and movies etc......
What will you suggest!- Asked by Connie C from Kenwick
- 2-May-2013
- Flag as inappropriate
AnswerI have the 13 inch macbook retina and I absolutely love everything about it. I have had the non retina MacBook Pro and while it was a great machine the macbook retina beats it hands down. The ssd on the retina pro is so much faster and the retina display is amazing. I originally purchased the 15 inch but it was just to bulky and uncomfortable even on my lap. There is just a pound difference so it wasn't the weight but the size. You will not miss the two inches. How much storage do you need? I have 256GB ssd but I also like you have an external hard drive. The non retina pro has an optical drive but that wasn't an issue for me. Lets face it, optical drives are on their way out. I have an apple super drive and have used it one time. If it was me you won't go wrong with either one but the way I look at it your already going to spend money so why not just get the best and in my opinion and experience the MacBook Pro is better than the air as far as the build and size you will love the MacBook Pro. Go with the retina if you can. You won't regret it.
- Answered by Rhonda S from Little Rock
- 4-May-2013
- Flag as inappropriate
-
Can I migrate my Windows7 PS Elements 10 library to my MacBook Air? I want to run the Mac version of PS Elements11.
Import/Export function.
- Asked by Dale P from Calgary
- 17-Apr-2013
- Flag as inappropriate
- Asked about: Adobe Photoshop Elements 11
-
What mac is best for a college student
I am starting college in the fall and kinda need a new laptop. Majoring in Culinary Arts. Thinking a Mac Air 11 in. would be my best option. Would be using it to help with school (notes etc)
- Asked by Kelly G from Tye River
- 27-May-2013
- Flag as inappropriate
-
CAN I use Region 4 DVD's on my Mac Book Pro
I live in Australia
- Asked by Genevieve R from Picnic Point
- 23-May-2013
- Flag as inappropriate
-
Is this fast enough to edit HD video from the drive - not just as a storage device?
I am editing 1.5 TBs of HD footage on an iMac off of a G-RAID USB 2.0 external hard drive, but its just not fast enough to keep up while I edit in HD (continues to skip/freeze/pause, etc).
Will using a Thunderbolt drive like this help me to edit HD footage from a drive without these issues?- Asked by Dore K from Los Angeles
- 24-Mar-2013
- Flag as inappropriate
- Asked about: LaCie 3TB d2 USB 3.0 Thunderbolt Se…
AnswerYes, and no. It mostly depends on your HD compression, or lack thereof. For example, in the high-end professional arena, uncompressed 1080i @ 29.97 fps (59.94 fields per second) video will never play consistently in real time from this drive, regardless of the fast connection. That's why most use multi-spindle raid drives configured so that the data from each video frame is divided up and recorded across several drives at once, increasing the bandwidth (your limitation was the 2.0 USB bandwidth). Conversely, in the less demanding home-based and pro-sumer arenas, various HD compressions (H264, Apple ProRes, DNxHD, etc.) could yield very satisfying results on this drive - based, however, on several factors: long GOP compression vs short, 8 bit vs 10 bit, video frame rates, data rates, etc.). Finally, another big factor is whether you are performing fades, video layering, or other transitional effects, from one video clip to another, obviously because this drive will have to buffer heavily and play two or more streams of HD video at once. Bottom line: choose the right HD compression and this drive will run steady. If you need more quality, you'll need more bandwidth (drives).
- Answered by Curtis E from Snellville
- 17-Apr-2013
- Flag as inappropriate
-
does the 15 inch mac book pro have a webcam?
- Asked by Daniel W from Hilton Head Island
- 19-May-2013
- Flag as inappropriate
-
can i download ilife '08
i need to replace garageband
- Asked by Albert F from Kingston
- 18-May-2013
- Flag as inappropriate
-
What is the best program to watch .avi files?
For MAC
- Asked by Sanjay G from Brampton
- 9-Jun-2012
- Flag as inappropriate
AnswerHello Sanjay,
I generally use VLC because it can play pretty much anything. But there may be converters you can use if you want it as an mp4 or such, but most of them cost or are on trial. I would say your best bet is VLC media player.- Answered by Joshua M from Sydney
- 12-Jun-2012
- Flag as inappropriate
-
Can I plug in my music keyboard and record onto the MacBook Pro 13"?
So I'm a music student and I wanted to know if the MacBook Pro 13" is good to use for program's such as GarageBand, Sibelius and Amadeus etc. Can I plug in my keyboard and record onto it? I'm a little unsure of its specs when it comes to using it for music courses and music in general. Thanks for your help.
- Asked by Amy G
- 13-May-2013
- Flag as inappropriate
-
If a Macbook Air powerful enough for video editing?
I love the portability of the Macbook Air, but I occasionally have to edit sound files, photos, and videos. Would a Macbook Air be sufficiently powerful enough?
- Asked by Richard L from Naperville
- 13-Jan-2012
- Flag as inappropriate
Best Answer• For occasional video editing:
Yes, it's fine. It'll probably do everything, just a little bit slower than a machine could do the job.
• For regular video editing:
No, get the MBPro (15/Retina 15" —or the just removed 17"— models which have much better CPU's and dedicated graphics chips, and would regularly outperform the Air's.
Short and uncomplicated answer. But of course many factors determine good performance, which are personal trade-off's. Eg's:
- Portability: Air (light/small), MBPro (heavier).
- Storage: SSD/flash (more expensive) quicker than HDD's (cheaper).
- RAM more is better: Air (limited amount), MBPro's (upto 16GB).
- I/O ports: Air less than MBPro (depends what's needed to connect).
- Optical drive: Air/non-Retina MBPro (none), other MBPro (yes).
- Screen: Retina MBP obviously has a superior resolution screen.
- Affordability: Air generally less than MBP (depends on exact purchase).
So you have to base your decision on many of these things.- Answered by James S
- 15-Jul-2012
- Flag as inappropriate
-
external video card for mini mac?
2.6g processor, 256 samsung 840 pro ssd, 16 gig of ram.
working with a lot of video, and audio, protools and editing video- Asked by Kevin H from Tacoma
- 8-May-2013
- Flag as inappropriate
-
What are the best laptops to use for Djing with the laptop only..and what requirements do I need to do so?
- Asked by Froilan V from Doral
- 4-May-2013
- Flag as inappropriate
-
Macbook Pro 2012 enough to handle Modo, Photoshop, and zbrush?
Hi I was wondering can the Macbook Pro 2012 with upgraded 16gb rams with the High-res glossy upgrade enough to handle Modo/Maya, Photoshop, and Zbrush. This is the 2.3ghz with the 512mb video card. I'm planning on using this for College as i'm an Art major and I need a laptop that can Handle all three of those software and maybe even other 3D rendering programs. This Laptop is design as a workstation and not for gaming. So I was wondering with the spec I have will it be enough. Please don't get all technical on me as i'm new to Macs. Also this wont be doing any Video Editing at all and i might upgrade the main HDD into a SSD in the future. Thanks in advance and i'm simply buying a Mac so that i can use both Mac and PC in my field. I have a powerful PC desktop at home.
- Asked by Steven H from Los Angeles
- 4-May-2013
- Flag as inappropriate