Originally Posted by
GrumpyDiver
Sorry, I can't agree with you on this. I have one laptop with and one without the SSD drive and the startup time difference can measured in seconds, and if that is the only parameter to measuring performance, then the SSD is indeed an advantage. I generally leave my machines on all the time, so this difference is not all that important to me. I tend to walk away when the machine starts up.
A higher end video performance; unless it is an Adobe recognized nVidia CUDA capable card and you are running Premiere Pro CS5 or newer, it is going to have zero impact on performace for most image editing work. The video cards are going to generally only be used for 3D graphics for gaming, that is what they are designed for.
Again, if the SSD is used for buffering your output, there is a speed advantage, but again, in the case of the two machines I am using, I'd be hard pressed to suggest one is faster than the other; the SSD machine is about 6 months newer than the machine without one.
On the other hand, more RAM has a very definite advantage (reduced swapping to the HDD).