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I am planning to buy a new laptop which will be my workstation while working with the Creo 4. The projects I work on are not very complex and big. On the PTC website I have found a pdf file called Hardware Note-Creo 4 with system specifications recommended for Creo 4. The recommended memory according to the document is 4 GB. However, the GPO solution the support center for Creo in my country has advised me to order a computer with minimum memory capacity of 16 GB.
Now I doubt about the information on PTC Hardwar Note- Creo 4 and I am wondering which exact system requirements I should go for. Since upgrading the laptop is not as easy as a desktop, I would prefer to order a laptop which would work for couple of years with Creo without any problem.
Could you plz help me to collect the right system requirements?
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The PTC recommended 4GB is the absolute minimum!!!
We had a user running Creo2 on his 4GB machine and it was unbearably slow.
Changed him to a 8GB machine and he can now get his work done.
If you want a laptop to last a few years, I would go with nothing less than 16GB.
The PTC recommended 4GB is the absolute minimum!!!
We had a user running Creo2 on his 4GB machine and it was unbearably slow.
Changed him to a 8GB machine and he can now get his work done.
If you want a laptop to last a few years, I would go with nothing less than 16GB.
I am planning to buy a new laptop to run cero4.0 , plase sugest me the hardware spacifications
Thanks
You're welcome.
Remember the PTC published spec list is a MINIMUM!!!!
My specs for a laptop:
17" screen with high resolution
NVIDIA graphics chip in the Quadro family, not GeForce
3.0+gHz processor speed, I prefer Intel Xeon chips over the i-series
16GB ram minimum
256GB SSD for the main drive
1TB drive for data files/storage
Windows 10 OS
CPU should be as fast as possible on single thread performance.
> 3.0+gHz processor speed, I prefer Intel Xeon chips over the i-series
why Xeon?
br Bernhard
Larger L3 Cache
Support for ECC memory
Designed to support heavier workloads
Multi-core chips
but for single Creo workstations?
Multi-core has no performance advantage for Creo - Quad-Core is the best you can get.
Heavier Workloads, for Simulate maybe.
L3 Cache - haven't found a possibility to benchmark this.
ECC - there are different opinions about ECC.
All valid arguments, I was stating my preferences. As to the original posting, the specs listed by PTC need to be taken as absolute minimum.
If it is not a dedicated Creo laptop, then other chips may be a better option depending on your actual work mix.