Although, if I did a lot of 3D work, I'd probably favor Ryzen right now. You can add and remove as many boxes as you want. This helps you set an appropriate scope for what you need to cover in your animation guidelines no one wants to spend hours on extensive guidelines that address things your team will never actually need. The main reason I can't answer you with 1st hand knowledge is that I've gone with Intel to run Photoshop, Illustrator, After Effects, Premiere Pro, Audition, Media Encoder and - on occasion - Animate. Animation in Design Systems 6 will be using your guidelines is to find out what those designers need and what you should focus on. The performance benchmarks for Premiere Pro and After Effects are impressive. If you're considering the purchase of one, perhaps purchase it from someplace that will allow you to return it or exchange it so you have time to test your workflow.
That said After Effects lists Intel for Windows and macOS, but you'll find performance benchmarks for After Effects running under the AMD Ryzen™ Threadripper™ PRO 3995WX on AMD's website.ĭo you already have a Ryzen based workstation or are you considering the purchase of one? If you already have one and your subscription includes Animate, just install it and see what happens. So, you can expect the software to run as expected and you can expect that if it doesn't that a support agent can verify that the software is installed correctly. The main reason to stick to the published system requirements - aside from being able to run the software in the first place - is so that Adobe Support can assist you should the need ever arise.įor example, the Premiere Pro system requirements read, "Intel® 6th Gen or newer CPU – or AMD Ryzen™ 1000 Series or newer CPU". Animate CC might run anyway, however, Adobe CC applications that support AMD Ryzen say so in the processor specifications.