Hi Anne,
I don't profess to be terribly knowledgeable about this area, and especially laptops, but as nobody else has answered...
I think you probably need to aim for the most powerful processor you can afford as this will crunch through fractal calculations faster. Multiple cores will help too as will "Hyper-Threading" as UF is able to distribute the work among the cores and in a series of "threads" (potentially doubling up on the number of cores Windows thinks you have)... this is from the Help file under Calculation details:
If you have a processor with Hyper-Threading, Ultra Fractal will recognize this and split up its calculations accordingly. In most cases, this will result in a significant speed improvement. Otherwise, you can force Ultra Fractal to use just one processor.
RAM is probably less of an issue but having plenty is always a good thing and can improve general performance and multi-tasking so get as much as you can afford. You may not have much choice in this area with a laptop, though.
I believe it is a fact of life that multitasking when rendering is nearly always an issue in some circumstances regardless of machine spec. Just recently I have been using UF6 to zoom into some deep areas of the Mandelbrot set. Rendering such areas takes many hours and has caused significant slowdowns, despite my having a reasonably high spec PC*. Normally I enjoy quite speedy renders for most of my work which, though heavily multi-layered are relatively "shallow" and thus quicker to compute than these recent deep zooms. I also don't often do very large image renders - another factor determining the impact of rendering, of course.
So look carefully at laptop specs. I imagine some will be presented as being optimized for certain popular uses - perhaps lots of hard drive space for storing videos or a beefy graphics card for gamers. These are not necessarily the best for your purposes. Machines aimed at graphic design or video encoding work may be more suited. Whatever they call it I think your prime focus should be on the processor.
Just my opinion, of course. I don't know if anybody else has any other recommendations.
*My PC has a Intel i7 3.60GHz CPU (6 cores) and 16 GB of RAM.
Hi Anne,
I don't profess to be terribly knowledgeable about this area, and especially laptops, but as nobody else has answered...
I think you probably need to aim for the most powerful processor you can afford as this will crunch through fractal calculations faster. Multiple cores will help too as will "Hyper-Threading" as UF is able to distribute the work among the cores and in a series of "threads" (potentially doubling up on the number of cores Windows thinks you have)... this is from the Help file under **Calculation details**:
> If you have a processor with Hyper-Threading, Ultra Fractal will recognize this and split up its calculations accordingly. In most cases, this will result in a significant speed improvement. Otherwise, you can force Ultra Fractal to use just one processor.
RAM is probably less of an issue but having plenty is always a good thing and can improve general performance and multi-tasking so get as much as you can afford. You may not have much choice in this area with a laptop, though.
I believe it is a fact of life that multitasking when rendering is nearly always an issue in some circumstances regardless of machine spec. Just recently I have been using UF6 to zoom into some deep areas of the Mandelbrot set. Rendering such areas takes many hours and has caused significant slowdowns, despite my having a reasonably high spec PC*. Normally I enjoy quite speedy renders for most of my work which, though heavily multi-layered are relatively "shallow" and thus quicker to compute than these recent deep zooms. I also don't often do very large image renders - another factor determining the impact of rendering, of course.
So look carefully at laptop specs. I imagine some will be presented as being optimized for certain popular uses - perhaps lots of hard drive space for storing videos or a beefy graphics card for gamers. These are not necessarily the best for your purposes. Machines aimed at graphic design or video encoding work may be more suited. Whatever they call it I think your prime focus should be on the processor.
Just my opinion, of course. I don't know if anybody else has any other recommendations.
_*My PC has a Intel i7 3.60GHz CPU (6 cores) and 16 GB of RAM._
Chris Martin
Gallery: Velvet--Glove.deviantart.com
Currently using UF6.05 on Windows 11 Professional 64-bit