I received an email today from AJ asking what I’d recommend if building a new workstation. Well, it turns out I’ve been thinking a lot lately about building a new workstation. My current setup is based on a Core2Duo E6600 with 4Gb RAM. It’s starting to show it’s age. I did upgrade to Windows 7, first the RC, then the RTM version. I like W7 a lot, but it’s not helping the old processor run any faster. I also upgraded recently to the 18MP Canon 7D. Working with 18 MP RAW images and HD Video really taxes the current machine. HD Video editing on this machine requires, shall we say, a lot of patience. So, in no particular order, and in not too much detail, here’s what I’m thinking:
For the processor, I’m definitely leaning toward a Core i7 9xx series. The RAW images and HD video almost demand a high-end processor. I’ll probably select one the middle of the high end models. We’ll see what that is in a few months when I get around to doing this. Price is always an issue, so I like to find the highest performing processor below the “knee” in the price curve (where it suddenly turns upward). This generally give the best bang for your buck.
The motherboard selection really boils down to compatibility with the processor (obviously), and a reputable vendor (MSI, ASUS (becoming Pegatron), Gigabyte). I’m not overly picky here as long as it has lots of SATA channels, lots of USB ports, and good customer reviews. When I’m ready to buy, I’ll spend a couple hours looking at the current offerings and decide on one.
This time around I’m thinking about finally going to go with a 64bit OS. This means I’ll be able to use lots of memory. I’m thinking that 12GB would be good. More memory won’t make Photoshop process images any faster, but it will prevent large images from being swapped to disk. And it’ll let me run more programs without swapping anything to disk. Video editing will also significantly benefit from more memory (it tends to rely on disk swapping much more than Photoshop since the source files are measured in GB’s). Truth be told, I’m still nervous about going to 64bit. I’ve never had good luck with it in the past and now Windows 7 is sold as either 32bit or 64bit. If 64bit doesn’t work for me I’m stuck with an unusable OS license.
About storage. One serious upgrade I did make recently is a NETGEAR ReadyNAS NVX Pioneer Edition RNDX400E network storage device. I put 4 Seagate Barracuda 1.5 TB SATA
drives configured as X-RAID-2 (Netgear’s special form of RAID5). This provides for about 4.1TB of real storage protected against any single drive failure. I also upgraded my entire network infrastructure to be Gigabit all over the house replacing all my old 10/100 switches with D-Link DGS-2208 8-Port 10/100/1000 Desktop Switches
. The ReadyNAS is lightning fast! the Gigabit is lightning fast! Data moves in and out of this device over the network as fast a normal on-board hard disk drive. I now store all my photos directly on the NAS (along with a ton of other media files that get served to various computers in the house). The NAS also has a couple of external Western Digital My Book 750 GB USB 2.0 External Hard Drives WDH1U7500N
that I use to automatically backup the photos weekly. I would highly recommend this setup.
For storage on the workstation I’m seriously considering a fast SSD drive for the OS. Here I can get away with a smaller capacity drive (which let’s me afford a faster model). A friend of mine just upgraded his system to an SSD drive and can’t stop talking about (rubbing in) how fast the computer boots and how fast applications load. With Photoshop and Lightroom taking quite a while to load, I’m really tempted to go down this path too. I’m thinking one of these OCZ Technology Agility Series SSD drives would be about perfect. I could use a smaller one, even 60GB
, but I’d like to keep my Lightroom cache on the SSD too. Imagine the speed!
I’ll probably throw another 1TB drive in the workstation for miscellaneous storage to cover work in progress files, documents, and other projects. I think the days of throwing 6 or 8 HDDs in the computer are gone for me. With drive capacities these days, I don’t see the need (though a really fast 4 drive RAID-0 array for video editing would be nice, but I don’t enough of that to justify it).
I’d like to buy new displays for the new workstation. I want four displays. I want three 23″ to 25″ widescreen (1080p, or 1920×1200) displays arranged next to each other, and a fourth 40+ inch plasma or LCD TV that will be mounted on the wall above the 3 displays. It sounds like overkill, and maybe it is. But I’m very used to having a lot of display real estate and I like it. The wall mounted TV will be the primary display for Windows Media Center 7 in my office. (We use Windows Media Center 7 exclusively for the entertainment center in the family room). We’ll see if this comes to fruition. The display portion of this build definitely falls under the fantasy wish heading. It’ll be the last part to be funded. This will aslo require a couple of dual output graphics cards (at least one of them requires HDMI).
I’ll probably add a Blu-Ray drive, but just a reader. I see no need for a writer.
A Soundblaster X-Fi card (whatever is the current value offering). I play with music production sometimes so I like descent audio. Also want to get some decent near field monitors but none of this has much context in a photography blog.
Another primary goal for this build is to build a machine that is more quiet than my current workstation. The current on isn’t load, but it’s not silent either. To accomplish this I’ll take advantage, and probably order some parts (case, power supply, fans, etc…) from End PC Noise. I’ve ordered from these guys before and been very pleased with what I received.
All right, let’s talk about vendors for a minute. I still like NewEgg a lot. I also like Amazona lot. I order almost everything from one of these two vendor (except to special stuff from the likes of End PC Noise). You have to price compare. I build wish lists at both places to keep track of what I’m ordering. With my recent ReadyNAS/Gigabit network upgrade I was all set to order everything from Newegg. The order included 2 mail in rebates delivered as prepaid VISAs totaling about $120. When I checked everything at Amazon, I found that the entire order was $100 cheaper and didn’t require any rebates and the shipping was free. I ordered from Amazon. You gotta shop around. And, whatever you do, do not shop at Fry’s. I just isn’t worth the hassle and risk of buying previously opened (and probably abused) merchandise.
Please leave any feedback or suggestions you’d like to share in the comments.
In 2005 I built a shiny and fast Photoshop Workstation. I’ve since done some significant upgrades, and a few (what might be considered) downgrades, to the machine. Read more…
I only installed Photoshop CS4 a few days ago and haven’t had a lot of time yet to explore. I got it working with my GPU (Nvidia 7950GT) after upgrading to the latest reference drivers from NVidia’s website. The smooth zooming, panning, and image rotation are pretty slick, but the one thing I’ve seen that I really like is that the core tools like the rubber stamp, and healing brushes now show a live preview of the result before you click-to-apply. It doesn’t sound like much, and I’m surprised it took this long to get something as simple as this, but it’s tremendously helpful. I really like it.
Here’s a collection of several of my favorite photographs from the last few years. These were taken from all over the world on various trips, and right here at home.
I have a set of 88 6.3MP images that I shot of Horseshoe Bend in Arizona. I used PTGui to stitch them together. The small image above hardly does the image justice. I’ve created a Zoomified version of the panorama that can be viewed here (or click on the image above). Once the viewer is loaded you can zoom in and pan around the photo. Try zooming all the way in to the camp sites setup at the bottom of the canyon.
[Sticky] Welcome to the new internet home for Kevin’s Photo Studio. I’m in the process of migrating some of my old material to this site. All of my most popular posts have been added already. The old links to these articles will be redirected to the new location automatically. This new site also has post ratings and comments so please take advantage of them. Again, welcome…
Just posted a bunch of wallpaper images that I’m offering free to anyone who wants them. There are several different sizes available so you can pick the ones closest to you monitor resolution. Enjoy…

This is another case of a great image sitting on my hard drive waiting for several months to be discovered. Last July my wife and I were in France for work and vacation. I captured this image shortly after sunset on the fourth. Not many fireworks that night, but it sure was a beautiful evening to be out walking on the Seine. The image is a stiched panorama of three exposures. I used PTGui to assemble it. Other than some nominal sharpening, it is essentially unretouched from what the camera captured.
While visiting family in southern California I spent some time photographing hummingbird that were congregating around the feeders at the house. I’ve created a gallery of hummingbird photos to share. I’m not an ornithologist so I’m not sure what species are represented in the collection, but they sure are fun to try to catch with the camera lens.
The basic setup was my Canon 1DMk2 with the 70-200/2.8L IS lens attached as well as the 550EX flash. This was mounted on my tripod (because I was standing in position for a long time). Since I wanted to use very fast shutter speeds I put the flash into high speed sync mode. I shot in manual mode so that I could control the background exposure seperately from the birds. The camera lens was about 4 to 6 feet from the hovering hummers, very close to the minimum focusing distance.
Any of these hummingbird pictures are available for sale. If you’re interested in using one, please contact me.


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