Photoshop questiono on laptop

Primex

New Member
Does anyone know the system requirements on a laptop for the latest version of Photoshop? By the way, I apologize in advance for asking so many questions so quickly, I'm justy a really uneducated indivdual.
 
-Intel® Pentium® III or 4 processor
-Microsoft® Windows® 2000 with Service Pack 4, or Windows XP with Service Pack 1 or 2
- 384MB of RAM to run any one creative application with Adobe® Bridge and Version Cue® Workspace
- Additional RAM required to run multiple applications simultaneously (512MB to 1GB recommended)
- 3GB of available hard-disk space to install all applications (installation of -1,024x768 monitor resolution with 16-bit video card (24-bit screen display recommended)
- CD-ROM drive
- For Adobe PostScript® printers: PostScript Level 2 or PostScript 3™
-Internet or phone connection required for product activation
- QuickTime 6.5 required for multimedia features
-Broadband Internet connection required for Adobe Stock Photos and additional services (The Adobe Stock Photos service may not be available in all countries, languages, and currencies and is subject to change. Use of the service is governed by the Adobe Stock Photos Terms of Service. For details, please visit
 
I have Photoshop 7 (the older version) on my old 800Mhz 128MB Gateway (5 years old)... it runs just fine. I don't think photoshop is all that tough on a system's resources. At least its not like video editing.

Here are the actual specs for Photoshop CS2:
Required Disk Space (PC) 650 MB

Required Memory (PC) 320 MB (Recommended: 384 MB)

Required CPU Class (PC) Intel Pentium III

Operating System Microsoft Windows 2000, Microsoft Windows XP
 
Starwarsman said:
I have Photoshop 7 (the older version) on my old 800Mhz 128MB Gateway (5 years old)... it runs just fine. I don't think photoshop is all that tough on a system's resources. At least its not like video editing.

Here are the actual specs for Photoshop CS2:
Required Disk Space (PC) 650 MB

Required Memory (PC) 320 MB (Recommended: 384 MB)

Required CPU Class (PC) Intel Pentium III

Operating System Microsoft Windows 2000, Microsoft Windows XP

what i put was for the whole creative suite :rolleyes:
 
Primex said:
...By the way, I apologize in advance for asking so many questions so quickly, I'm justy a really uneducated indivdual.
Not a problem, that's why this is a forum. If there were no questions or problems, there would be no forum. We're here to help. :D
 
Primex said:
Does anyone know the system requirements on a laptop for the latest version of Photoshop? By the way, I apologize in advance for asking so many questions so quickly, I'm justy a really uneducated indivdual.

i use photoshop CS on my pentium M 1.6 ghz laptop as well as my pentium 4 1.9 ghz PC. runs fine on both.
 
The_Other_One said:
CS on my laptop(sempron 2800 underclocked to 800MHz) and it runs just fine.

I feel so stupid, because I don't know what underclocked to 88MHz means. Everyone else, thanks for the help.

LaptopExtreme- Thanks I know I shouldn't feel bad, but I feel like I'm asking really obvious questions. Unfortunately, I have hundreds of them and I'll be on here a lot asking them periodically.
 
Primex said:
I feel so stupid, because I don't know what underclocked to 88MHz means...
He's probably using a program to lower his clock and voltage to the CPU. To get better battery life and cooler temperatures. I'm doing the same. I've got a 1.86 Ghz and I'm undervolting/underclocking to 800mhz (equals to .8 Ghz). Adds maybe 30% extra battery life and may extend the life of your processor. You can use programs like Notebook Hardware Control (NHC, also known as CHC-Centrino Hardware Control), or RMClock. I definitely recommend asking questions or reading tutorials before attempting though.
 
Yup... It really helps out this Averatec. I don't know exactly how much more battery life I get but it's definetly a good bit better, and heat is much less.

Odd how even at half speeds you can't tell a major difference!
 
The_Other_One said:
...I don't know exactly how much more battery life I get but it's definetly a good bit better, and heat is much less.
Odd how even at half speeds you can't tell a major difference!
Yup, not a lot of people will notice the difference because it uses dynamic switching, so it picks up the pace when needed. A lot of laptops in general does that already when running on battery (to an extent). But with undervolting, you can configure it into your own steps and use less power. I think you can get an average of 30% extra life... but of course it all depends on your usage.
 
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