From my Timeline this morning.
RicknJude wrote:
From my Timeline this morning.
What The H*** Is That Supposed To Mean? Not Even Funny. A PC Heater? Obviously not an adequate up to date computer. With Three Fans It Must Be A Gamer Not A PP used Computer.
Running PS makes the computer get really warm so it heats up the room. Kind of cute I thought.
lamiaceae wrote:
What The H*** Is That Supposed To Mean? Not Even Funny. An Adobe Heater -- Honeywell maybe.
Photoshop will get your computer heated up for sure, as will inDesign and Illustrator. I have a beast of a computer and when those three programs are doing their thing to a serious extent, I don't need the heating system on these cold winter days. My big computer heats up this room very nicely.
I'm currently doing the final editing and design layout on the fourth book for an author, so I am using Bridge, inDesign, Illustrator, and Photoshop to do things. The 350-page book will have over 1,000 pictures of cacti & succulents in it, and even though I have a superfast, super strong computer, converting 72-ppi RGB pictures to 300ppi CYMK pictures in Photoshop, and then saving them heats up the computer like nothing I've ever seen. Add inDesign into the equation for keeping track of over 1,000 pictures as I'm doing the layout and moving pictures here and there, doing final cropping, etc., well, my heating bill will be very low this coldest of the winter months here. My electric bill, on the other hand might cause me to start drinking.........
russelray wrote:
Photoshop will get your computer heated up for sure, as will inDesign and Illustrator. I have a beast of a computer and when those three programs are doing their thing to a serious extent, I don't need the heating system on these cold winter days. My big computer heats up this room very nicely.
I'm currently doing the final editing and design layout on the fourth book for an author, so I am using Bridge, inDesign, Illustrator, and Photoshop to do things. The 350-page book will have over 1,000 pictures of cacti & succulents in it, and even though I have a superfast, super strong computer, converting 72-ppi RGB pictures to 300ppi CYMK pictures in Photoshop, and then saving them heats up the computer like nothing I've ever seen. Add inDesign into the equation for keeping track of over 1,000 pictures as I'm doing the layout and moving pictures here and there, doing final cropping, etc., well, my heating bill will be very low this coldest of the winter months here. My electric bill, on the other hand might cause me to start drinking.........
Photoshop will get your computer heated up for sur... (
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The Plant Book sounds interesting. I never notice anything unusual with my PC (32GB RAM) as far as heat. But I nor few people on the UHH are doing anything as intensive as you are. I'm playing with one image at a time. I would assume AutoCad works a system hard too.
lamiaceae wrote:
The Plant Book sounds interesting. I never notice anything unusual with my PC (32GB RAM) as far as heat. But I nor few people on the UHH are doing anything as intensive as you are. I'm playing with one image at a time. I would assume AutoCad works a system hard too.
The author is Jeff Moore, owner of Solana Succulents in Solana Beach, California.
His three other books are "Under the Spell of Succulents," "Soft Succulents," "Aloes and Agaves in Cultivation." The fourth book that I'm working on is "Spiny Succulents."
You can find his previous books here:
https://www.solanasucculents.com/books/
lamiaceae wrote:
...I would assume AutoCad works a system hard too.
Yes it does. Whenever I build a computer for AutoCad use it gets the best gammer's motherboard available at the time. For some reason the last one built "needed" RAID 5 storage with large multi terabyte drives. Talk about a heater sitting under the desk - never had to worry about cold feet. Actually mounted a fan at the back of the desk knee hole to blow the heat out into the room.
Great Joke, thanks!
I'm sure Adobe wouldn't post that on its site.
Judging from a couple friend's past comments, who are PS junkies, that a truthfully funny joke.
OK, that was cute - and that's why you get a Mac!
Run the Mac in the summer and the pc in the winter
RicknJude wrote:
From my Timeline this morning.
Dang! I wish I would’ve thought of that! Thanks for the humor.
One of my jobs at work was to maintain the information environment. In my office I had 3 desktop PC sized servers, one security PC and 2 accounting PC's. Ran the AC 24/7/365. Never the heater. Even on sub zero days. That office had 2 walls that were exterior. Seems hard drives and processors generate lots of heat. Enjoyed the cartoon.
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