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Hello all
So i am a sound design student at Boston University and a longtime PC
user
i am starting to feel like i need to have a mac available to me
(hackintosh hasn't been working out)
> Most of the major recording and editing software have both Windows and Mac flavors.
I have been told that Pro Tools has been favouring Windows lately.
C-)
On Dec 15, 6:22 pm, Stephen Dee <steved...@gmail.com> wrote:
I have a Macbook 1,1 (Core 2 single) and it runs Qlab, Peak and Digital Performer really well. When you start getting into more then 12 tracks with effects, it gets really sluggish. At work, we run Protools on both a mirror door G4 and a dual G5. Protools LE runs great and can do multiple channels, effects, UAD, etc without too much of a hitch. Really it comes down to how many tracks, effects and stuff that you're going to use. In my opinion, I would get the most Mac that you can afford. It's going to last longer and you'll be much happier in the end. I also use an external firewire drive as well as a firewire audio interface. The firewire drive is faster then the internal in a laptop and the external card has a much better sound. If you are going to go Pro Tools, you'll have to get an external interface anyway. M-Audio devices are pretty low cost and they work with ProTools.
If you really want to do more with it, I would go to an iMac. For around the same price, you get a bigger and faster hard drive, bigger screen and a faster processor. You do give up the portability, though.
If you're going to buy new, definitely take advantage of the educational discount through Apple. If you are going to buy used, I'd kick the tires as much as you can. You don't know what it's been though before it gets to you. Good luck and happy Macing!
- Mike de Almeida
Audio Technician
University of Hartford
P.S. Tell Ben I said hi. :-)
On Dec 17, 3:42 am, Charlie Richmond
In Windows, advisable disconnect from internet and disable antivirus, which is a resource hog.
> -----Original Message-----
> From: theatre-s...@googlegroups.com [mailto:theatre-sound-
> li...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Stephen Dee
> Sent: Friday, December 18, 2009 2:35 PM
> To: theatre-sound
> Subject: [theatre-sound-list] Re: Macbook for audio
>
> I have only had problems with pro tools on windows
> i love the program if the damn thing would run right
>
Interesting. Not that I really care all that much because I don't care for
the application no matter which platform it's running on... but all the PT
demos I've sat through in the past few years now (you know the little demo
at your local Guitar Center or that kind of thing) have all be running on
Windows based computers. Although I guess is has been well over a year now,
probably closer to two years since I even bothered to attend one.
Richard B. Ingraham
RBI Computers and Audio
http://www.rbicompaudio.20m.com
On Dec 17, 3:34 am, Justice Bigler <justice.big...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Interesting. Not that I really care all that much because I don't care for
> the application no matter which platform it's running on... but all the PT
> demos I've sat through in the past few years now (you know the little demo
> at your local Guitar Center or that kind of thing) have all be running on
> Windows based computers. Although I guess is has been well over a year now,
> probably closer to two years since I even bothered to attend one.
And now I remembered where I heard that they were focusing on Windoze ;-)
C-)
>
> - Mike de Almeida
> Audio Technician
> University of Hartford
Just to clarify one of Mike's points:
A firewire external hard drive is *not* faster than the internal
drive. The external drive reduces the bus and controller load that
running the OS (especially OSX which relies heavily upon virtual [hard
drive] memory) and playing back tons of tracks will take. While you
can accomplish a lot without a external drive, I wouldn't recommend it
for larger sessions, especially when running playback software or
samplers that stream from disk.
Right now, just about the fastest external drive interface that you
can get is eSATA. A lot of drive enclosures feature this connection,
but you would have to have a MacBookPro (or Powerbook as I like to
remember them as) with an ExpressCard interface. More $$$, but truly
the Cadillac of portable drive interfaces.
Firewire 800 / 400 comes standard on all macs and is plenty fine for
most everything you will want to do.
USB 2.0 approaches Firewire 400 at burst periods and can also handle
some pretty decent throughput. I wouldn't use it for intensive video
work, but I have had a lot of success with using USB 2.0 drives to
store streaming samples for various softsamplers.
USB 1.0 drives (if you can find them): don't touch with a 25' XLR.
Phillip Peglow
Consulting / Sound Design / Engineering
www.ArtecConsultants.com
> can get is eSATA. A lot of drive enclosures feature this connection,
The new fanless AudioBox II has this type of connection and uses optional solid
state hard drives for the fastest and most reliable audio device on the market
today.
Charlie
| - Charlie Richmond - Richmond Sound Design - Skype: charlierichmond - |
| - http://www.RichmondSoundDesign.com "Performance for the Long Run" - |
| -------- SoundMan-Server -- the ultimate Virtual Sound System ------- |
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>
> Firewire 800 / 400 comes standard on all macs
>
No Firewire at all on MacBook Pro or other MacBooks.
http://bindapple.com/no-more-firewire-for-mac/
Chip
That's a year out of date, they've since reversed course, there is no
Firewire on MacBook_s_, but there is on Pros, Minis, etc. It's all
FW800, but it's there.
--A
While the basic premise is correct, a FW drive CAN certainly be faster
than the internal on a laptop actually. Of course replace the
internal with a SSD and that won't ever happen:) That being said, you
are absolutely correct in the largest difference comes from being able
to dedicate the drive to reading and writing the audio tracks, rather
then for the OS to page memory off of or onto, applications to load or
access new files, etc. At least on a spindle based drive.
>
> Right now, just about the fastest external drive interface that you
> can get is eSATA. A lot of drive enclosures feature this connection,
> but you would have to have a MacBookPro (or Powerbook as I like to
> remember them as) with an ExpressCard interface. More $$$, but truly
> the Cadillac of portable drive interfaces.
>
My only problem with eSATA is that I can't power a 2.5" drive over it
like I can with FW.
Thomas Vecchione
going to have enough power?
keeping in mind it had 4 gigs of ram
this one?
winning bid on similar models have been around $600
which is around my price range
On Dec 22, 3:45 pm, Stephen Dee <steved...@gmail.com> wrote:
> so is something like this
>
> http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=140368429023&ssPag...