@daniel_lyall
well the screen shot I took was of the old iMac. I put a SSD in recently to speed it up.
It did work and now it's used as a inter web machine. Yes it still has fusion installed but I only use it to look at drawings and some times just tweek cam code. It's fine for that.
Try press/pull and it plays up.
So even with 8 gig ram in it. It has problems. It's the 128meg graphics card that's the weak link there and I know it's that.
What I now use for my main fusion work is a early 2011 MBP. That also has a SSD 16gig of ram a Intel 5500 combined chip( which fusion doesn't use) and a 1gig chip for the graphics requirement (which is used by fusion when running) even that can be made to crash at times (usually after a update).
So I think the minimum specks are a bit hopeful. But then I don't know when ADSK last reviewed the requirements.
Theres a PC sat in the office that has 32 gig of ram and is waiting for me to afford the duel 4 gig graphics cards it can take. It has a zenon 8 core CPU and is fully water cooled(or will be).
Why do I have that? It was built for laser scanning in hi res mode (1.5m points a second). But I lost the funding stream for the scanner. Now the PC sits there waiting to be put to use!
SW graphics card specks are a joke. Same as the pricing policy. The maintenance fees. The training costs and the add-ons (HSM anyone! I mean why would you use anything else) to make it a one stop shop.
My SW reseller and I don't even talk any more. I didn't even get a Christmas card this year! He hates fusion with a passion. I guess he's stands to lose a lot more clients eventually!
@Anonymous
Give fusion more than the minimum specks and enjoy. If you can't because of the machine your using. Build a PC that can handle it easy.
Compared to SW you will still have enough change to go on a nice holiday!
Try turning off that fancy stuff for the time being on your current machine.
Having looked at the link Daniel gave there simply isn't the architecture in the HD5500 chip to make a difference. As it says in the link.
"Depending on the specific CPU, the maximum GPU frequency varies between 850 and 950 MHz. Due to the low TDP, however, the average clock in 3D applications will be somewhat lower.
Equipped with fast dual-channel memory, the HD Graphics 5500 outperforms the HD Graphics 4400 (Haswell, 20 EUs) by 20 - 25 percent and also beats the HD Graphics 5000 (Haswell, 40 EUs). However, even a low-end dedicated GeForce 820M ist about 10 - 30 percent faster than the HD 5500. Games as of 2014/2015 will usually run fluently only at (very) low settings."
Please let us know if your computer guy finds a driver update is available for the HD chip. As said before that may help a lot of people.
I hope ive helped a bit!