My old editing rig had a 1.8ghz cpu and 2 gigs of ram. No fancy video card, or the like.
That was good enough to edit HD using Adobe CS3, though things would get bogged down if you had footage loaded into both Premiere & AfterFX at the same time.
Running either programme, by itself, was no issue at all. I'd consider that to be a minimum, though.
Obviously, the more cpu & ram the merrier. Faster rendering times, for starters.
My newest desktop (haven't loaded the Adobe yet) is a monster, compared to the old one. It also only cost $450, right off the shelf. Good luck tryin' to bag a comparable Apple for a similar price.
As far as editing software - I've always used the Adobe suites... though I gotta say, while it's a great bundled package, Adobe always seems to be bringin' up the rear when it comes to keeping competitive. They'd rather release an entire new suite (requiring paid upgrades) than patch existing software to keep current.
Heck, there's even some no-brainer stuff (like lack of OMF audio support) that looks like it will never get implemented. That's really important for someone like me, who is cursed with crappy sound and relies on outsourcing to audio experts to fix.
Actually, I'll be taking a step back from Adobe before automatically upgrading again. I haven't really looked at Vegas, but if they have OMF exports that would seal a deal for me, tbh.
At any rate - I'm rambling now. First things first, mind you. Before plunking down a lot of bucks on expensive editing suites (or even their bare-bones basic versions) play around with the basic editing software that comes with the OS for your computer. (ie: Movie Maker for Windows). The essentials are the same... and if you decide that editing actually sucks (not everyone is an editor, tbh) you'll be able to put that money where it makes the most sense.
Gah! Rambling again!
