_Review_Nvidia GTX 560 Ti, CUDA, CPU vs GPU Premiere Pro
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Thanks for the answere
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@xrospider Well, if you have many many layers, rendering at 1080p or more, i recommend getting the 2GB...If you just do a little color correction and render at 720p or 1080p, then the 1GB will be ok.
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Hello, I want to buy GeForce® GTX 560 2048MB, but I want to know if worth the money instead of GeForce® GTX 560 1024MB. Whit CUDA the plus 1 gb is rentable,
Thanks for the answer.
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is this good for renering: gtx 550 ti 1 gb gddr5. i5 2500k. kingston 8 gb ddr3 1333 mhz. 1x 1tb 7200 rpm. 1x 500 gb 7200 rpm. asus p8p67 evo. ?
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@ravenhawk82 but i have a GTX560ti and if i import "GeForce GTX 560ti" it doesn't recognize
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6990 views o_O
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@learninglounge you mean Mb/s? in any case: yes. if you have a proper raid setup. personally i would favor a raid 10 with around 6-8 2TB drives. best price/performance+storage you can get at the moment. that might change in a year if SSD technology becomes much cheaper. then you would just get a 500GB disk for the workspace and scratch and a few cheap raid 1 arrays for backup.
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It's not really a hack, you just need to add a line to it's configuration file to make it recognize your card. In it's main install file, there is a file called cuda_supported_cards.txt. Open it up and add "GeForce GTX 560". It will now recognize your card and allow you to use it's power for rendering and processing.
How did you manage to get the GTX560 enabled without the hack? Its not on the supported GPUs list for Premiere pro. Only the GTX470, 570 and 580 are there...
afthefragile 6 months ago 8
yea this is weird, i thought gtx 570 and 580 were the only ones that were compatible with premier pro (in the 500 series)
plutomok 6 months ago 3