I would say that you should use at least the i7 with 16gb RAM. 

My buddy does video editing with an i7 and 8gb and it's not enough.  

Regards,

Jason
________________________________
From: David Schwartz <[email protected]>
Sent: Nov 30, 2017 11:17 AM
To: Main PLUG discussion list
Subject: Re: OT: Any Mac Geniuses on the List who can advise on a Mac for 
Christmas?

Generally speaking, the more RAM the better.

Also, video editing is going to benefit from more RAM and SSD no matter what.

But if you had to make a choice between more RAM and an SSD, go with the SSD 
because the transfer rates to/from disk will make a far bigger difference in 
overall performance most of the time.

Not having enough RAM causes the OS to spill-over into virtual memory, which 
spools it to the disk. So the faster speeds that SSD offers effectively 
diminishes the effects of less RAM.

The line is becoming heavily blurred between RAM, disk cache, and disk storage. 
Over time, the cache and disk speed will become so well-tuned that it will just 
look like a single huge chunk of static RAM.

Depending on the software she’s using, it might also take advantage of 
multi-core CPUs, hyper-threading in the CPU, 64-bits, and any assistance the 
GPU can offer.

-David Schwartz
>
> On Nov 30, 2017, at 8:16 AM, Mark Phillips <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Thanks for all the great input – especially the refurbished Mac stores!
>
> A more technical question – am I correct is assuming she needs 16 GB of RAM 
> and a quad core i7 processor to edit 60 minutes of video footage? Or, is this 
> over kill?
>
> Thanks!
>
> Mark
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