Quadro cards
by Jeff Kosmicki
on
Aug 4, 2009 at 5:11:56 pm
I am putting together a Xena system (LHi)and have a question about GPUs. Does installing a higher-end card like a 4000 or 5000 series card improve AJA's real-time preformance more than a mid-range card like a FX 1500? I understand the higher-end card's improvements with the system as a whole, but I am just talking about AJA specifically.
Does AJA cards use the GPU for any accelleration of playback or effects? There is a bit of difference in cost and I am wondering if it worith the price to go with the high-end card.
thanks,
Re: Quadro cards by Jeff Brown on Aug 5, 2009 at 1:38:18 pm
As far as I know, Xena cards (or similar I/O hardware) is "self-contained", and does not use any GPU processing. The driver reliability in "workstation-class" graphics cards is worth considering, though. (such as FX vs. GeForce)
Re: Quadro cards by Tim Kolb on Aug 10, 2009 at 1:45:33 pm
What AJA does and what Adobe does are two different things. AJA is indeed 'self-contained' and AJA functions don't require a workstation-class display card.
However, After Effects and now in CS4, Photoshop, use the GPU for faster response during composition. After Effects uses the GPU for working previews and Photoshop CS4 uses the GPU to manipulate images very rapidly.
As Jeff notes, the Quadro cards have drivers that are typically more stable and have better compatibility with other pro hardware...like AJA.
As far as a Quadro 1500 vs a bigger card, it's like adding RAM after you have the minimum required for your application...it all helps. When it comes to video workstations, I don't recall anyone ever having an issue from an 'over' configured system.
Re: Quadro cards by Jeff Kosmicki on Sep 1, 2009 at 6:05:25 pm
OK, so I got the LHi and a Quadro card up and running. I have been using ATI cards for the past few years and have not used an Nvidia in a while.
The problem I am having is with the Nview software, it does not seem to work with hardly any applications, and certainly not CS4.
Is anyone out there using a Quadro FX card on Vista with 2 monitors? I can't seem to get CS4 apps to open full screen (covering both monitors) without having to hand stretch the corners every time, and all the child windows open in the center between the 2 monitors. Obviously Nview is supposed to fix this, but CS4 and just about every other program seems to ignore the Nview settings.
If anyone has a workaround I would appreciate it.