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<blockquote data-quote="Kubdya Khavis" data-source="post: 2506246" data-attributes="member: 97813"><p>Nope. Not worth it for your budget.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Yes obviously. GPU isnt limited to gaming. There are two ways you can encode a video, software acceleration i.e. your cpu does the work, and hardware acceleration i.e. you gpu encodes the file. Hardware acceleration is much better and faster as the gpu has dedicated resources to do exactly that. Especially if you are planning to edit 4k videos. Even the playback during editing, especially graphics and effects can be hardware accelerated to provide a much smoother editing experience. Personally I wouldnt even think of editing without a dGPU.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>Amd gets bodied by nvidia when it comes to productivity. Amd encoding is quite poor and in some cases may even be unsupported. Between the both, nvidia is the obvious choice. Though if you are planning to build a system primarily for editing I would highly suggest taking a look at Intel Arc A750. It costs 20k so you are saving some money. Also premiere pro 24 started supporting hardware acceleration for Arc GPUs. And it performs really well, 3-5% better than 3060 and even 4060. <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VhMZsD4v3CA" target="_blank">A750 vs 3060 and 4060.</a> </p><p></p><p><a href="https://www.pugetsystems.com/labs/articles/intel-arc-a770-and-a750-content-creation-review-sept-2023-update/#Video_Editing_Adobe_Premiere_Pro" target="_blank">Puget's review of Arc GPUs.</a></p><p></p><p>Secondly it supports more codecs than Nvidia cards. Even supports AV1 unlike 3060. And there's also Intel Deep Link which combines the iGPU and dGPU to gives better performance in productivity in certain supported softwares (performs 10-30% better when turned on). You can do some research on A750 and then make a call. Also make sure the softwares you use support hw acceleration by Arc gpus.</p><p></p><p>Also from your list, I would suggest getting a better mobo. The one you listed doesnt seem to support xmp profile for ram. Check out ASRock H610M-HVS/M.2 R2.0 or a Gigabyte mobo. I would personally avoid msi mobos.</p><p></p><p>Also make sure to research on the genuinity of compify and sphinxpc. I think there was a thread about trusted online sellers. You can check that out. The other sellers on the list are fine.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Kubdya Khavis, post: 2506246, member: 97813"] Nope. Not worth it for your budget. Yes obviously. GPU isnt limited to gaming. There are two ways you can encode a video, software acceleration i.e. your cpu does the work, and hardware acceleration i.e. you gpu encodes the file. Hardware acceleration is much better and faster as the gpu has dedicated resources to do exactly that. Especially if you are planning to edit 4k videos. Even the playback during editing, especially graphics and effects can be hardware accelerated to provide a much smoother editing experience. Personally I wouldnt even think of editing without a dGPU. Amd gets bodied by nvidia when it comes to productivity. Amd encoding is quite poor and in some cases may even be unsupported. Between the both, nvidia is the obvious choice. Though if you are planning to build a system primarily for editing I would highly suggest taking a look at Intel Arc A750. It costs 20k so you are saving some money. Also premiere pro 24 started supporting hardware acceleration for Arc GPUs. And it performs really well, 3-5% better than 3060 and even 4060. [URL='https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VhMZsD4v3CA']A750 vs 3060 and 4060.[/URL] [URL='https://www.pugetsystems.com/labs/articles/intel-arc-a770-and-a750-content-creation-review-sept-2023-update/#Video_Editing_Adobe_Premiere_Pro']Puget's review of Arc GPUs.[/URL] Secondly it supports more codecs than Nvidia cards. Even supports AV1 unlike 3060. And there's also Intel Deep Link which combines the iGPU and dGPU to gives better performance in productivity in certain supported softwares (performs 10-30% better when turned on). You can do some research on A750 and then make a call. Also make sure the softwares you use support hw acceleration by Arc gpus. Also from your list, I would suggest getting a better mobo. The one you listed doesnt seem to support xmp profile for ram. Check out ASRock H610M-HVS/M.2 R2.0 or a Gigabyte mobo. I would personally avoid msi mobos. Also make sure to research on the genuinity of compify and sphinxpc. I think there was a thread about trusted online sellers. You can check that out. The other sellers on the list are fine. [/QUOTE]
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