• abhibeckert@beehaw.org
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    8 months ago

    … one of the tests here is editing an 8K video. There are pro use cases that don’t need anywhere near that much memory.

    For example I regularly use an old MacBook Pro with 4GB of RAM to run QLab. It’s definitely “pro” software - but it’s just automation software and commonly used for tasks like sending a 20 character text string to another computer on the network when you hit a button… it can do more complex things but most of the time the cheapest Raspberry Pi has enough compute power (you can’t run it, or anything like it, on Linux however).

    A MacBook Air would be useless, because it doesn’t have HDMI, and that often is needed. You don’t want to be messing with a USB-C to HDMI dongle when a thousand people paid hundreds of dollars each to watch a video that you’re playing.

    • pheet@sopuli.xyz
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      8 months ago

      There are pro users that don’t need anywhere near that much memory.

      Well, every computer is ”Pro” if you take professional writers as an example. But this is a marketing term anyways, not a definition. If it was an actual definition then I’d take it to cover ”most professional computing tasks”.