Julian Walker
Joined: 29/09/08
Posts: 31
Loc: Wiltshire UK
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PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
#994857 - 26/06/12 04:31 PM
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Hello Folks Yes I know this question has probably been asked thousands of times
and there are arguments for both. I have an old Toshiba laptop that I use for everything,
work, photos, music etc I am running Reason 4 on it together with Cubase and it's
struggling with certain things plus getting v slow, bless it. What i'd like to
get is a dedicated laptop purely for doing my recording on. I use a M audio Keystation as
my keys and I have a Zoom R24 which I do some recording on and use as an audio interface
when I need one. Can anyone offer some advice as to whether i'm better off with
a Mac or PC and which model would fair best? Budgets about £400 to £500 and i'm quite
open to the idea of getting something secondhand. I'm au fait with both mac and pc so am
open to either. Bless you all in anticipation of oracle like advice
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Kwackman
Joined: 07/11/02
Posts: 1245
Loc: Belfast
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Re: PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
[Re: Julian Walker]
#994861 - 26/06/12 04:56 PM
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Cubase and Reason run on either, so you're not tied down. However, I suspect your
budget might not get you a reasonably modern Mac laptop, even second hand.
-------------------- Cubase, guitars.
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Thomas.
Joined: 29/04/12
Posts: 35
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Re: PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
[Re: Julian Walker]
#994911 - 26/06/12 10:19 PM
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The big advantage of a Mac desktop is that the drivers work, since the hardware choices
are severely limited compared to a Windows desktop machine. However, laptops are a more
even playing field: when you buy a laptop, the hardware is pretty much fixed, so provided
you use the manufacturer's updates, it should always work. Then it is down to price and
preference. MacBooks tend to be a little more expensive than comparable Windows machines,
and a lot more expensive than the budget lines. If you are happy with Windows, and your
preferred DAW runs under it, you can save some money following that route. Certainly you
won't find a MacBook for the sort of money you are suggesting, but there are plenty of
Windows machines that you can buy.
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johnny h
Joined: 24/07/06
Posts: 2270
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Re: PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
[Re: Thomas.]
#994945 - 27/06/12 07:56 AM
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Quote Thomas.:
The big advantage
of a Mac desktop is that the drivers work, since the hardware choices are severely limited
compared to a Windows desktop machine. However, laptops are a more even playing field:
when you buy a laptop, the hardware is pretty much fixed, so provided you use the
manufacturer's updates, it should always work. Then it is down to price and preference.
MacBooks tend to be a little more expensive than comparable Windows machines, and a lot
more expensive than the budget lines. If you are happy with Windows, and your preferred
DAW runs under it, you can save some money following that route. Certainly you won't find
a MacBook for the sort of money you are suggesting, but there are plenty of Windows
machines that you can buy.
I
find the opposite to be true. With desktop computers you can pick high quality components
which work and give good performance. With laptops you are taking a gamble on whether it
will work and quite often suffer from incurable glitches and dropouts. MacBooks are by
far the best option.
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tomdot
Joined: 05/01/12
Posts: 147
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Re: PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
[Re: Julian Walker]
#994958 - 27/06/12 09:25 AM
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I have done both of these things and found that the only difference is working method
given that you choose the correct components.
I have always built quality PC's
that have lasted for years to run a PT rig, but I am now using an old 2007 MacBook to run
GarageBand and it is comparable in performance/ability.
If the only issue is
money, then I would suggest sourcing the parts and building a PC dedicated to music only.
If you wanted to switch to Mac then there's nothing to stop you buying a refurbished
MacBook which will knock about £100 off of it making it about £700-800.
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SecretSam
active member
Joined: 29/10/02
Posts: 1492
Loc: Officially, I do not exist.
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Re: PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
[Re: Julian Walker]
#994987 - 27/06/12 12:37 PM
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Hang on while I fetch the beer and a slice of pizza. This thread could take a while.
These days, both Mac and PC work well enough. You are sure to get something
working without fuss on a Mac, and have a good but not 100% chance of getting something
working first time on a PC. If you have a little time and knowledge to read about drivers
and hardware specs, you will get more bang for your buck with a PC.
If you
consider a Mac, make sure the existing plugins you use will work on either platform.
dBlue Glitch is a popular one that doesn't.
Your budget is tight. A PC
laptop at that price will need careful research into chipsets and so on. You won't get a
Mac lappie, but you could think of a Mac Mini.
I would personally avoid a
secondhand laptop of any sort. They take a lot of hammering compared with a desktop, are
full of other people's snot and dropped food, and cost a lot to upgrade and repair.
You do see secondhand iMacs from the design community, and a two-year-old one will
still have a decent spec.
-------------------- Instant gratification is actually pretty good. It's fast as well.
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The Red Bladder
Joined: 05/06/07
Posts: 2072
Loc: . ...
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Re: PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
[Re: Julian Walker]
#994992 - 27/06/12 01:15 PM
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I bought a Medion two-and-a-half years ago for £500 from Aldi in a rush to get
some CD covers done, when two PCs went belly-up at the same time and I am now using it to
edit audio! Totally reliable and well thought out.
Medion
web page
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unifaun
Joined: 03/11/09
Posts: 9
Loc: Warburg (Germany)
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Re: PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
[Re: The Red Bladder]
#995184 - 28/06/12 12:17 PM
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Hi
after many years of troubleful working on Windows I have recently decided
to switch to Mac.
I bought a used early 2011 MBP, OS X is Snow Leopard 10.6.8
and I work with Cuabse 6.5.
I am very satisfied, no problems so far and I am
running just one device for all, no more file chaos on several pc's, no driver problems
with my 2 Focusrite interfaces.
And when I'm going home from work by train I
can already work on my latest songs even with the in-built Apple core-audio driver and
headphones.
Ok, a MBP is a bit more expensive than a Windows notebook but in my
case it's worth it.
I would switch to Mac again.
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SecretSam
active member
Joined: 29/10/02
Posts: 1492
Loc: Officially, I do not exist.
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Re: PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
[Re: Julian Walker]
#995190 - 28/06/12 12:33 PM
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Just a thought: if you or a close family member are in fulltime education, Apple stores
often do very aggressive educational discounts: 20% or 30%. That works out here in
Sartheffrika anyway.
-------------------- Instant gratification is actually pretty good. It's fast as well.
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Pete Kaine
Scan Computers
Joined: 10/07/03
Posts: 3159
Loc: Manchester
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Re: PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
[Re: SecretSam]
#995199 - 28/06/12 01:18 PM
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Quote SecretSam:
Hang on while I
fetch the beer and a slice of pizza. This thread could take a while.

Quote SecretSam:
I
would personally avoid a secondhand laptop of any sort. They take a lot of hammering
compared with a desktop, are full of other people's snot and dropped food,
And that's how you get ants....
-------------------- ScanProAudio & 3XS Audio Systems
ScanProAudio Blog
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clisma
Joined: 02/03/06
Posts: 183
Loc: Los Angeles/Zürich
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Re: PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
[Re: Pete Kaine]
#995204 - 28/06/12 01:35 PM
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Quote SecretSam:
I would
personally avoid a secondhand laptop of any sort. They take a lot of hammering compared
with a desktop, are full of other people's snot and dropped food,
And that's how you get ants....
When I first saw that pic I gasped out loud! Then I realized it
was a Dell and not a Macbook... Whew.
-------------------- I love technology; it complicates my life...
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Exalted Wombat
Joined: 06/02/10
Posts: 4220
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Re: PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
[Re: clisma]
#995217 - 28/06/12 02:39 PM
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Quote clisma:
Quote SecretSam:
I would
personally avoid a secondhand laptop of any sort. They take a lot of hammering compared
with a desktop, are full of other people's snot and dropped food,
And that's how you get ants....
When I first saw that pic I gasped out loud! Then I realized it
was a Dell and not a Macbook... Whew.
Yup. Even ants have SOME standards!
:-)
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SecretSam
active member
Joined: 29/10/02
Posts: 1492
Loc: Officially, I do not exist.
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Re: PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
[Re: Julian Walker]
#995221 - 28/06/12 02:49 PM
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Those are not ants. They are the special, tiny goblins that do the sums in a Dell, and
have just come out for some fresh air.
-------------------- Instant gratification is actually pretty good. It's fast as well.
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Will_m
Joined: 02/04/09
Posts: 508
Loc: Manchester
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Re: PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
[Re: SecretSam]
#995248 - 28/06/12 06:16 PM
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Quote SecretSam:
Just a thought:
if you or a close family member are in fulltime education, Apple stores often do very
aggressive educational discounts: 20% or 30%. That works out here in Sartheffrika
anyway.
Education discount
is 15%, not even staff discount is 30%.
-------------------- http://www.williammorrismusic.com
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trailmixxx
Joined: 17/04/08
Posts: 20
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Re: PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
[Re: Julian Walker]
#995257 - 28/06/12 08:24 PM
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According to dawbench.com, you get more channels or effects at lower latency on windows vs
osx, on the same hardware. http://www.dawbench.com/win7-v-osx-6.htmToo each their
own. If you are running a dedicated system, you should be fine in any case. But when
specing a Wintel laptop...you need to be a bit more picky depending on your audio
interface. Not all controller chipsets are equal.
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johnny h
Joined: 24/07/06
Posts: 2270
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Re: PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
[Re: Julian Walker]
#995296 - 29/06/12 08:08 AM
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You don't even need a dedicated music computer. Most writer / producers I know (actually
nearly all of them) use a MacBook pro for everything, including gigs.
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molecular
member
Joined: 13/12/03
Posts: 454
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Re: PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
[Re: Julian Walker]
#995425 - 29/06/12 04:44 PM
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My better half just bought a 6 month old white MacBook from a comet seconds store for
£270. Totally capable laptop.
I wouldn't get one off eBay, but comet or apple
refurb auctions definitely worth trying.
Also, my apple education discount was
10% as a freelancer, although you get a third off AppleCare which was well worth it
-------------------- Anto mo Ninja, Watashi mo Ninja
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Jimmy T
Joined: 30/07/06
Posts: 46
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Re: PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
[Re: Julian Walker]
#997879 - 14/07/12 11:33 PM
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I've bought a Dell Studio 1535, 1555 and 1558 and a mac book pro revision 4 and years back
a Toshiba Satelite all through ebay. I have never had a problem.
The Dells
where all immaculate and work to this day very well.
So I would say a Dell
Studio core 3 duo 1557/8 would be £300 or less in near mint condition.
Typing
this on a MacBook Pro rev 4 2.5 GHZ core 2 duo 512 GPU, 250 gig drive. £500. Near
mint, medium battery.
All very good. I could have bought a new MBP but I needed
the expresss34 slot and the MBP 15" now has SD card slot.
So I would say you
can get a good laptop for £300 pc or £500 MBP
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Mr Spanky
member
Joined: 04/11/03
Posts: 238
Loc: Tokyo
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Re: PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
[Re: Julian Walker]
#997885 - 15/07/12 01:55 AM
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Really, I'd pony up the extra and get the entry level macbook pro. It'll be a more
worthwhile investment.
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OneWorld
Joined: 07/04/09
Posts: 1566
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Re: PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
[Re: Julian Walker]
#997938 - 15/07/12 10:50 AM
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I use both Macs and PCs at work, and a PC at home, I don't think Macs are the silver
bullet that some people seem to think and there are some at work that find the Macs
irritating, on the other hand there are the devoted Macophiles who would rather stick hot
needles in their eyes than be seen anywhere near a PC
The PC crew seem to get
things done even without uber-expensive Mac gear, and more being the open system
architecture, and a vast amount of freeware, the PC user can experiment more, get under
the hood so to speak.
It's like posing the question which is better - coffee
or tea, ale or lager. It all depends what scratches your itch.
Things like
Reason, Ableton? Cubase (except for the Atari Cubase) began life on a PC
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OneWorld
Joined: 07/04/09
Posts: 1566
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Re: PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
[Re: Julian Walker]
#997940 - 15/07/12 10:56 AM
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Quote Julian Walker:
Hello
Folks
What i'd like to get is a dedicated laptop purely for doing
my recording on. I use a M audio Keystation as my keys and I have a Zoom R24 which I do
some recording on and use as an audio interface when I need one.
As a slight aside, how you finding the
Zoom R24, I have seen a company selling refurbished ones on eBay at £249.00 and am really
considering one
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Exalted Wombat
Joined: 06/02/10
Posts: 4220
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Re: PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
[Re: OneWorld]
#997966 - 15/07/12 01:07 PM
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Quote OneWorld:
The PC crew seem
to get things done even without uber-expensive Mac gear, and more being the open system
architecture, and a vast amount of freeware, the PC user can experiment more, get under
the hood so to speak.
Yeah.
By the time my Mac friends have told me how much better they'd do it, I've already done
it. Twice.
But it isn't because they're Mac and I'm PC. It's because I'm
better at computer stuff than they are. Not boasting, just stating a fact. (And,
although I'm way above the median, there are plenty better than me.)
I can
probably make ANY piano sound better than most of you can. Many of you can make ANY
guitar sound enormously better than I can. As we must keep reminding ourselves as we read
the front pages of SOS, "It isn't about the gear - it's knowing how to use it!"
There's still a feeling among some musicians that the computer is merely an unfortunate
necessity. They want an "easy" computer, an "easy" program. But the computer is now more
and more a part of the music creation process (in fact, for many people it is their ONLY
"instrument".) We should embrace the complexities and the possibilities of our computer
"instruments" as we do of our purely musical ones.
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Folderol
Joined: 15/11/08
Posts: 2558
Loc: Rochester, UK
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Re: PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
[Re: Julian Walker]
#997991 - 15/07/12 04:04 PM
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Just to throw something into the ring...
I've got a Linux DAW setup that I've
had for over 4 years now. So far, I've only hit the buffers a couple of times when running
multiple channels of an insanely complex (but delicious sounding) synth.
I
notice that these days there seems to be a sort of competition to see who can run the
greatest number of tracks at the same time. I don't believe 'more' is necessarily better.
-------------------- It wasn't me!
(Well, actually, it probably was)
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johnny h
Joined: 24/07/06
Posts: 2270
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Re: PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
[Re: Julian Walker]
#998002 - 15/07/12 05:06 PM
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Macbook Pros are built so well, they really are superb machines and for the price. The
trackpad is amazing, the aluminum case is extremely solid, battery life is great, screen
is perfect. In terms of the whole package, nothing comes close.
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OneWorld
Joined: 07/04/09
Posts: 1566
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Re: PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
[Re: Folderol]
#998007 - 15/07/12 06:02 PM
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Quote Folderol:
Just to throw
something into the ring...
I've got a Linux DAW setup that I've had for over 4
years now. So far, I've only hit the buffers a couple of times when running multiple
channels of an insanely complex (but delicious sounding) synth.
I notice that
these days there seems to be a sort of competition to see who can run the greatest number
of tracks at the same time. I don't believe 'more' is necessarily better.
I tried LINUX a few times as at the time I
had a Delta 1010 so I knew there were drivers. But I could not for the life of me work out
that JACK palava, LINUX identified my card but when I tried to get it to work all I got
was some convoluted message about "not finding the JACK Server" or words to that effect,
what's Jack's Server when it's about? Seems the LINUX community want t make everything as
perplexing as they can. Reminds of those folk that keep a sophisticated old banger on the
road just so they can get off on adjusting the fuel/air mix or tweak the ignition timing
when travelling >259 feet above sea-level
When all we want is switch on,
install drivers, start the DAW and then start plinka-plonkin
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Wiseau
Joined: 25/08/04
Posts: 250
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Re: PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
[Re: Julian Walker]
#998018 - 15/07/12 07:10 PM
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I think this should have been posted in the pc forum.
-------------------- 'You know it's a bad role when Nic Cage passes on it.'
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Exalted Wombat
Joined: 06/02/10
Posts: 4220
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Re: PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
[Re: Folderol]
#998021 - 15/07/12 07:41 PM
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Quote Folderol:
Just to throw
something into the ring...
I've got a Linux DAW setup that I've had for over 4
years now. So far, I've only hit the buffers a couple of times when running multiple
channels of an insanely complex (but delicious sounding) synth.
I notice that
these days there seems to be a sort of competition to see who can run the greatest number
of tracks at the same time. I don't believe 'more' is necessarily better.
Interesting. Which distro/applications?
Is Linux for a DAW "ready" now? I've given it a try a few times over the years, but so
far always found it disappointingly at a pre-beta test stage :-(
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johnny h
Joined: 24/07/06
Posts: 2270
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Re: PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
[Re: Exalted Wombat]
#998032 - 15/07/12 08:22 PM
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Quote Exalted Wombat:
Quote Folderol:
Just to throw
something into the ring...
I've got a Linux DAW setup that I've had for over 4
years now. So far, I've only hit the buffers a couple of times when running multiple
channels of an insanely complex (but delicious sounding) synth.
I notice that
these days there seems to be a sort of competition to see who can run the greatest number
of tracks at the same time. I don't believe 'more' is necessarily better.
Interesting. Which distro/applications?
Is Linux for a DAW "ready" now? I've given it a try a few times over the years, but so
far always found it disappointingly at a pre-beta test stage :-(
Linux for music production? Some people
have far too much time on their hands...
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Folderol
Joined: 15/11/08
Posts: 2558
Loc: Rochester, UK
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Re: PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
[Re: Exalted Wombat]
#998051 - 15/07/12 10:46 PM
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Quote Exalted Wombat:
Quote Folderol:
Just to throw
something into the ring...
I've got a Linux DAW setup that I've had for over 4
years now. So far, I've only hit the buffers a couple of times when running multiple
channels of an insanely complex (but delicious sounding) synth.
I notice that
these days there seems to be a sort of competition to see who can run the greatest number
of tracks at the same time. I don't believe 'more' is necessarily better.
Interesting. Which distro/applications?
Is Linux for a DAW "ready" now? I've given it a try a few times over the years, but so
far always found it disappointingly at a pre-beta test stage :-(
I'm fairly experienced with Linux so I can
probably get a system setup for whatever, faster than most people. My own DAW is based on
debian, but a very simple install with none of the usual office stuff to get in the
way.
As I'm mostly a pure electronic musician, the mainstay of my work is the
Rosegarden sequencer and Yoshimi soft-synth. I also use Qsynth for 'real instrument'
soundfonts and occasionally Jackrack for effects plugins. Very rarely Hydrogen drum
machine (I'm crap at percussion).
In the last year or so I've picked up guitar
again, and for that I use the Rakarrak effects app. (I also sometimes loop synth sounds
through it too). I usually use Timemachine for audio recording. It's simple, direct and
has a 10sec. pre-record. I have Ardour, but it's vastly over spec for what I need, so I do
any audio editing in Audacity (but keep the source files).
As Rosegarden can
play audio as well as MIDI, I often have it set up to run the whole kaboodle at once,
which means I can play and mix a full recording in one pass. Jammin is a useful
compressor/equaliser/limiter, and I sometimes use it for overall results, sometimes
routing just an individual track through a separate instance.
If you're using a
package managed system like debian, the trick is to install Ardour first. This will drag
in almost everything any other sound app will need and will also kindly set up jack for
you.
-------------------- It wasn't me!
(Well, actually, it probably was)
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RWNorman
Joined: 18/03/07
Posts: 5
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Re: PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
[Re: Julian Walker]
#998055 - 15/07/12 11:27 PM
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Julian, you need to step back away from the computer if you're going to invoke a deity's
help for the poor thing! <g> Well then, off and to the question. First
off, you can't ask the question. It's been asked so much without a definitive answer that
it should be in the book of records. Obviously the only unanswerable question in the
universe. Secondly, you already have the level of equipment you need and if you
buy a Mac now, you're already one step behind on the interfi (thunderbolt), unless you buy
the top end Mac. You already know the arguments for/against the PC. Thirdly,
the apps that you currently feel comfortable with should be your guideline. In the
profession, Pro Tools reigns, and probably 98% Mac. Then the question becomes are you
thinking of going pro? So your choice is ---- the same choice you had
before. Roger W. Norman SirMusic Studio http://rwnorman.typepad.com/rwnormans_beer_food_and_p/http://www.reverbnation.com/rogerwnorman
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RWNorman
Joined: 18/03/07
Posts: 5
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Re: PC or Mac for a dedicated music computer??
[Re: Folderol]
#998056 - 15/07/12 11:44 PM
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The complexity of a track does not add to the computational capabilities of that track,
nor does it add up like a summing bus does. It's just playing back a track. Now if you can make a midi track cough and sputter you're doing something! <g> Roger W. Norman SirMusic Studio http://rwnorman.typepad.com/rwnormans_beer_food_and_p/http://www.reverbnation.com/rogerwnorman
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