Good Afternoon to All!
I am in the process of updating my desktop computer and was wondering if anyone had in recommendations for specs that would be helpful for working with photography such as: hard drive, memory, graphics, processor, etc.
I am not a professional but have used a camera most of my life (over 40 years) and have just really gotten into using digital photography (I'm still stuck in the film age) and using a computer to manipulate photos, store and print. There is just so much out there I have no clue.
Recommendation on a good printer would be nice too. I have also looked into a photo scanner, Epson since I have thousands of photo prints that I would like to scan and make DVD for each of my children of the prints that I have.
I appreciate any other information that you may be able to give me and look forward to hearing from you.
Thanks in advance,
CK in VA
I am in the process of updating my desktop computer and was wondering if anyone had in recommendations for specs that would be helpful for working with photography such as: hard drive, memory, graphics, processor, etc.
I am not a professional but have used a camera most of my life (over 40 years) and have just really gotten into using digital photography (I'm still stuck in the film age) and using a computer to manipulate photos, store and print. There is just so much out there I have no clue.

Recommendation on a good printer would be nice too. I have also looked into a photo scanner, Epson since I have thousands of photo prints that I would like to scan and make DVD for each of my children of the prints that I have.
I appreciate any other information that you may be able to give me and look forward to hearing from you.

Thanks in advance,
CK in VA
). RAM is relatively cheap these days, so as long as you have at least 8GB, you'll be fine.
), 12 GB RAM (Triple Channel, it accesses 3 sticks at a time instead of 2, making it slightly faster, at least that's the rationale I used when I built it), ATI Radeon 5770HD Graphics card (1GB VRAM) (used to be 2 of these...but one of those died too). Of course, I do a lot of gaming (erm, used to, I haven't for awhile...) so my the focus on this machine was different.
. It may be that on-board graphics ties up some CPU resources that the export can use, and you free up by moving to discrete GPU, but according to Adobe: