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#1
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
I suppose it's the price barrier that holds me back. I normally just go to Fry's and get a mobo combo for a couple three hundred dollars when it's time to upgrade a machine. I've had the same case for 15 years. I sometimes get the idea though that the audio industry favors Apple products. I also love that OSX is built on a *nix kernel. I spend most of my time at work in a shell on Linux. It's my comfort zone. I do Cygwin and dabble in the Windows Subsystem for Linux but it feels like double wrapped sex. Anyway, I've been considering a Mac MINI. I saw one today with the caption: Refurbished: Apple C Grade Desktop Computer Mac mini MD389LL/A-C Intel Core i7 2.3 GHz 4 GB 2 TB HDD Mac OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion From a reputable source for $359. How difficult will it be to use this box with my existing monitor with dual DVI input? If I replace the monitor with a modern 4k, will I need an adaptor? Will this box drive 4k? Is it suited well to hobby level realtime DAW work? Does it have a fan? Is it quiet enough to just sit on my desk near my mics or will I have to build a box or something? My current tower is in a closet behind my desk. That works fine from a noise standpoint, but inconvenient often when I need access to the machine. Thanks for any tips or alternatives. Tobiah |
#2
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
On 26/04/2019 3:56 AM, Tobiah wrote:
I suppose it's the price barrier that holds me back. I normally just go to Fry's and get a mobo combo for a couple three hundred dollars when it's time to upgrade a machine.Â* I've had the same case for 15 years. I sometimes get the idea though that the audio industry favors Apple products.Â* I also love that OSX is built on a *nix kernel.Â* I spend most of my time at work in a shell on Linux.Â* It's my comfort zone.Â* I do Cygwin and dabble in the Windows Subsystem for Linux but it feels like double wrapped sex. Anyway, I've been considering a Mac MINI.Â* I saw one today with the caption: Refurbished: Apple C Grade Desktop Computer Mac mini MD389LL/A-C Intel Core i7 2.3 GHz 4 GB 2 TB HDD Mac OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion From a reputable source for $359. How difficult will it be to use this box with my existing monitor with dual DVI input?Â* If I replace the monitor with a modern 4k, will I need an adaptor?Â* Will this box drive 4k? Is it suited well to hobby level realtime DAW work? Does it have a fan?Â* Is it quiet enough to just sit on my desk near my mics or will I have to build a box or something? My current tower is in a closet behind my desk.Â* That works fine from a noise standpoint, but inconvenient often when I need access to the machine. Thanks for any tips or alternatives. Tobiah Apple's early foothold in the industry mostly because ProTools was exclusively Mac, and competing applications were hamstrung by this,. There were significant obstructions for other hardware and software providers from getting an elbow in. Fortunately that constriction has largely gone and softwares on other platforms are now recognised for their strengths. But the historical bias does remain. You know where Microsoft got it's current touchy-feely dumb-user 'hold your hand and manage everything for you' interface ideas from ? All the stuff that gets in the way of somebody who knows what they want, where they put it, and what they want it to do, etc ? Apple was a once status-symbol intended to advertise that the user was a more discriminating sophisticated nerd , with a good appreciation of high-design, than other mere plebes. However in effect they were brainwashed and locked into a monopolistic Mac-world. Still has the snob-value thing to a degree. geoff |
#3
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
In message , Tobiah
writes I suppose it's the price barrier that holds me back. I normally just go to Fry's and get a mobo combo for a couple three hundred dollars when it's time to upgrade a machine. I've had the same case for 15 years. I sometimes get the idea though that the audio industry favors Apple products. I also love that OSX is built on a *nix kernel. I spend most of my time at work in a shell on Linux. It's my comfort zone. I do Cygwin and dabble in the Windows Subsystem for Linux but it feels like double wrapped sex. Anyway, I've been considering a Mac MINI. I saw one today with the caption: Refurbished: Apple C Grade Desktop Computer Mac mini MD389LL/A-C Intel Core i7 2.3 GHz 4 GB 2 TB HDD Mac OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion From a reputable source for $359. How difficult will it be to use this box with my existing monitor with dual DVI input? If I replace the monitor with a modern 4k, will I need an adaptor? Will this box drive 4k? Is it suited well to hobby level realtime DAW work? Does it have a fan? Is it quiet enough to just sit on my desk near my mics or will I have to build a box or something? My current tower is in a closet behind my desk. That works fine from a noise standpoint, but inconvenient often when I need access to the machine. Thanks for any tips or alternatives. Tobiah Interesting! I have a close friend, a broadcast and magazine music journalist and reviewer, who suddenly told me he had always fancied a Mac and had just purchased a refurbished 21" iMac running OSX Sierra, 3.06GHz i3, 8GB, 500GB. This was followed by a message a week or two later that he was passing it on to his wife and investing in an iMac with a larger screen as his eyes were not up to the small font. His previous totally Windows set up included his main almost state of the art machine with a huge monitor, SSD + 2TB HD etc, etc. He is, however, on Windows 10 and has been hit by the lengthy updates and some resultant unexpected changes. I am his main computer support, often using Teamviewer. I have never used a Mac, but use Linux for the backup machines here. Teamviewer works from me into the iMac, the only noticeable difference seeming to be that he and I now have independent cursors rather than sharing as in the PC. I am now just about able to navigate my way around his Mac and have assisted (?!) with internet and email access, in getting the keyboard set up correctly, setting up printers and with transferring many files across. He still seems besotted with the Mac - he keeps referring to one publisher who has encouraged the move - in spite of my questions of "why?". He does just use computers for word processing and document management, but does listen to music held digitally in one form or another. When he has needed to edit audio, I have remoted into his machine and edited for him. He has already been asking about installing an SSD in his Mac. I have so far refused. I honestly see no advantage that he has gained by the move. I keep telling him that I have recently upgraded a couple of Lenovo laptops here to more modern touch +pen convertible ones with SSD's plus big HD's. Each cost about half what he paid for his iMac, and is at least as powerful, albeit with the smaller screen. I doubt this post is of much help, but hopefully will be of some interest. -- Bill |
#4
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
On 26/04/2019 11:12 PM, Bill wrote:
He still seems besotted with the Mac - he keeps referring to one publisher who has encouraged the move - in spite of my questions of "why?". The expression is "hook, line, and sinker". He now feels superior to the plebes. A bit like an Audi driver, or a vegan. It will keep cropping up early in any conversation that he is involved in now. geoff |
#5
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
geoff wrote:
On 26/04/2019 11:12 PM, Bill wrote: He still seems besotted with the Mac - he keeps referring to one publisher who has encouraged the move - in spite of my questions of "why?". The expression is "hook, line, and sinker". He now feels superior to the plebes. A bit like an Audi driver, or a vegan. It will keep cropping up early in any conversation that he is involved in now. The nice thing about the mac is that it has a decent command line and you can do everything you need to do from the command line. Which, given their history, is kind of ironic. Windows is starting to get there with Powershell, but controlling ProTools from Powershell is not going to be a pleasant experience. It's really nice to be able to script things and do bulk conversion of files on OSX. Computers are supposed to do repetitive tasks for you, not force you to do them yourself. Linux would have been nice, and there are Linux dialects with pseudo-realtime hooks in the kernel that could have made for a nice audio platform, but really pulseaudio is a disaster. I'm still hoping for someone to develop decent low-level audio support for linux and I'm hoping it happens before the Red Hat people manage to destroy everything with integrated bloat. So I kind of think of OSX as a nice compromise... it's a unix-like system with a decent shell, but with good audio support. And yes, Apple's obsession with chasing the latest flashy new thing is a problem, but for a DAW you can just get a system and freeze it. Until a couple years ago I still had a first generation Sonic workstation for CD mastering. It was in the studio for 26 years, then it went straight from the studio to a museum. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#6
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
26.04.2019 14:41 geoff:
On 26/04/2019 11:12 PM, Bill wrote: He still seems besotted with the Mac - he keeps referring to one publisher who has encouraged the move - in spite of my questions of "why?". The expression is "hook, line, and sinker". He now feels superior to the plebes. A bit like an Audi driver, or a vegan. It will keep cropping up early in any conversation that he is involved in now. Until he has learned the uncomfortable way, that a Mac PC has just about the same annoyances as any Windows PC can deliver... Well, Apple does provide some superior problem quality in some areas (like loss of data - who does not love that?!) - their ohso great T2 security chip is a major cause for repeated problems - but hey, there´s nothing better than a strong belief, isn´t it? ;-) Phil |
#7
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
PREFACE: Well, at least the most obvious Mac-bashing has abated. Probably due more to the natural aging process of the dissenters than anything.
I started with a Mac SE around 1987. I had been exposed to DOS at work. It seemed obstructive and clunky. I don't write code. (I still have the SE30 and fire it up on special occasions; July 4th, Halloween, Steve Jobs birthday) I don't want to go to the command line. Call me a pussy if you want, but I'd rather do work on a computer than work on a computer. I now have a trail of three aging Macs that I manage to keep working, the MacBook Pro I'm writing this comment with and a one year old iMac monster with a 4TB SSD. I have kept the older ones running because I can, and because there are apps that no longer run on the current OSs. I can see any of the Macs on my wireless system from any other mac. I also have a printer/scanner wirelessly connected. No extra upgrades needed. All Macs network. I do work on them periodically. I just swapped out a failed interior System/Apps drive yesterday. It was easy. Shut down, open the case, pull the drive, put in the new one, close the case, restart, initialize the drive, open carbon copy cloner and clone the backup Sys/Apps drive to the new one. I have also swapped RAM and done a few other interior jobs over the years. I find the insides, usually, intelligently designed. CORE CONTENT: I've never had a Mac Mini and wouldn't buy one on a bet (or otherwise). I just don't like the form factor and where's the damn CD/DVD drive! (I know, you don't get one today, and they are becoming irrelevant, but they can also be damn handy.) The piece you're eyeing is a 2012 Mac. While the price may be attractive, you may just be buying an obsolete hockey puck, well, semi-obsolete anyway. Each time I have bought a Mac, I have bought a new Mac; in the middle or slightly above the given feature set. I didn't get the absolute fastest iMac, but I did get a 4TB SSD. I'm running Apple Logic Pro and Final Cut Pro on it. So far, no fans have been audible or come on. My advice is not to get this Mac Mini unless you want to torture yourself (or it, or both). Stay where you are. Instead, buy a nice electric recliner for the big screen room. Regards, Ty Ford |
#8
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
On 27/04/2019 1:04 AM, Scott Dorsey wrote:
.. The nice thing about the mac is that it has a decent command line and you can do everything you need to do from the command line. Which, given their history, is kind of ironic. Start Menu, Run. Or WinKey+R, and if you really for some odd reason want to laboriously type what a mouse click or two can do, WinKey+R, then CMDF and you can do all sorts of command line 'fun' in a fully text window. Windows is starting to get there with Powershell, but controlling ProTools from Powershell is not going to be a pleasant experience. Surely you control everything about ProTools from ... ProTools ? It's really nice to be able to script things and do bulk conversion of files on OSX. Computers are supposed to do repetitive tasks for you, not force you to do them yourself. Um, isn't that what applications are for, irrespective of whichever OS ? Unless one is some sort of radical command-line fundamentalist. geoff |
#9
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
On 26/04/2019 7:19 am, geoff wrote:
You know where Microsoft got it's current touchy-feely dumb-user 'hold your hand and manage everything for you' interface ideas from ? All the stuff that gets in the way of somebody who knows what they want, where they put it, and what they want it to do, etc ? Yeah pinched it from Apple after Apple had already pinched it from Xerox. :-) |
#10
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
In article , Trevor wrote:
On 26/04/2019 7:19 am, geoff wrote: You know where Microsoft got it's current touchy-feely dumb-user 'hold your hand and manage everything for you' interface ideas from ? All the stuff that gets in the way of somebody who knows what they want, where they put it, and what they want it to do, etc ? Yeah pinched it from Apple after Apple had already pinched it from Xerox. :-) Well, Apple paid licensing fees to Xerox for the idea at least. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#11
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
geoff wrote:
On 27/04/2019 1:04 AM, Scott Dorsey wrote: . The nice thing about the mac is that it has a decent command line and you can do everything you need to do from the command line. Which, given their history, is kind of ironic. Start Menu, Run. Or WinKey+R, and if you really for some odd reason want to laboriously type what a mouse click or two can do, WinKey+R, then CMDF and you can do all sorts of command line 'fun' in a fully text window. The command line on Windows is like something out of the 1960s. By the mid-70s most operating systems had far more flexible command lines. As I said, Powershell helps a whole lot. Powershell has some design problems; if you pipe an executable into another you need to be have enough disk space to hold the entire contents of the pipe, which seems like a very boneheaded design decision to me. But if you have a directory of a thousand files with .bwav extensions and you need to rename them all to have .wav extensions, you can do it in powershell. Good luck trying it with command.com. It's really nice to be able to script things and do bulk conversion of files on OSX. Computers are supposed to do repetitive tasks for you, not force you to do them yourself. Um, isn't that what applications are for, irrespective of whichever OS ? File manipulation and management and conversion should be part of the OS, I shouldn't need to have to write or download an application to do that sort of thing. If the OS doesn't do that sort of thing, what good is it? Unless one is some sort of radical command-line fundamentalist. I probably am. I don't want to take my hands off the keyboard if I can help it. The GUI is a fine thing for applications like image and audio editing, although to be honest I use protools without looking at the screen most of the time. I just wish I had a real scrub knob on my keyboard. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#12
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
In message , geoff
writes On 26/04/2019 11:12 PM, Bill wrote: He still seems besotted with the Mac - he keeps referring to one publisher who has encouraged the move - in spite of my questions of "why?". The expression is "hook, line, and sinker". He now feels superior to the plebes. A bit like an Audi driver, or a vegan. It will keep cropping up early in any conversation that he is involved in now. I had a phone call from my friend with his new refurbished iMac yesterday. I told him about this discussion, that I had joined in and read out Geoff's reply above. He accepts the Audi driver, but is appalled by the vegan reference. He then proceeded to rave over the sound quality of the iMac, and insisted on playing me a track from Benny Goodman over the Mac and the phone so that I could hear the quality. I avoided answering directly by diverting into discussion of Lionel Hampton's playing on the track. This is hard work for me as I am not a particular fan of, or know much about, jazz. We then went on to the comparative recording quality of different labels (mainly Capitol, Columbia and MGM) in the '40's. He is, as I said, primarily a music journalist, writing mainly and often humorously about musicians and jazz. He lives in a large house with a huge room dedicated to music and a large lounge. Both of these have decent hifi separates systems that sound good to me. His office/computer room is similarly huge. His big Windows machine has some small "computer speakers" that he rarely switches on, and now the iMac with the built in speakers. What he is interested in is whether Toby, the OP, has proceeded with his purchase and any comments he may have after a few days or weeks of ownership, so I said I would post here to ask the question. -- Bill |
#13
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
On 29/04/2019 12:55 AM, Scott Dorsey wrote:
But if you have a directory of a thousand files with .bwav extensions and you need to rename them all to have .wav extensions, you can do it in powershell. Good luck trying it with command.com. No command.com, however lots of luck with "cmd". Try WinKey+R, 'cmd' enter to bring up the command-line window, navigate to the directory you want, then " ren *.bwav ???-*.wav " and Bob's your uncle. Easier still with a application such as Bulk Rename Utility in many cases, oplus all the other more sophisticated options an app may have. geoff |
#14
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
I like the Mac, though I do wonder how long Apple can maintain their legacy of innovation in light of Steve Jobs's death.
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#15
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
James Price wrote:
I like the Mac, though I do wonder how long Apple can maintain their legacy of innovation in light of Steve Jobs's death. I wish they would just stop it with the innovation! I am trying to get work done! I want a system that is stable. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#16
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
On 29/04/2019 13:53, Scott Dorsey wrote:
James Price wrote: I like the Mac, though I do wonder how long Apple can maintain their legacy of innovation in light of Steve Jobs's death. I wish they would just stop it with the innovation! I am trying to get work done! I want a system that is stable. --scott Me too. Long term support Linux is looking better by the day. I'm not sure if there's a way to transfer Linux based Mac tools to it, though. WINE does the job for most Windows programs and tools, though. -- Tciao for Now! John. |
#17
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
On Monday, April 29, 2019 at 7:53:49 AM UTC-5, Scott Dorsey wrote:
James Price wrote: I like the Mac, though I do wonder how long Apple can maintain their legacy of innovation in light of Steve Jobs's death. I wish they would just stop it with the innovation! I am trying to get work done! I want a system that is stable. I'm just speaking in general, not necessarily fixing an OS that's not broke. |
#18
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
John Williamson wrote:
On 29/04/2019 13:53, Scott Dorsey wrote: James Price wrote: I like the Mac, though I do wonder how long Apple can maintain their legacy of innovation in light of Steve Jobs's death. I wish they would just stop it with the innovation! I am trying to get work done! I want a system that is stable. Me too. Long term support Linux is looking better by the day. I'm not sure if there's a way to transfer Linux based Mac tools to it, though. Depends a lot on the linux distro. A lot of them are much worse than Windows or OSX in that regard. Even Red Hat has gone to systemd and the new gnome bloatware. Linux gets a whole lot of change-for-change's-sake these days which is very disturbing. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#19
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
On 29/04/2019 17:20, Scott Dorsey wrote:
Linux Workstations Depends a lot on the linux distro. A lot of them are much worse than Windows or OSX in that regard. Even Red Hat has gone to systemd and the new gnome bloatware. Linux gets a whole lot of change-for-change's-sake these days which is very disturbing. --scott I did try Ubuntu Studio using KDE a while ago, and while it was not a bad way to work, it didn't mesh well with the rest of my systems, so it got deleted. The core operating system is stable, and updates to it don't affect programs, while you can opt to only take security updates or the whole bleeding edge, nightly updated experience for the programs. It will tell you at boot that "100 updates are available", all of which you can probably safely ignore if you don't collaborate over the net or don't run a firewall. -- Tciao for Now! John. |
#20
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
In message , Bill
writes He is, as I said, primarily a music journalist, writing mainly and often humorously about musicians and jazz. OT, but maybe it will amuse someone. Had a panic call a few minutes ago. He was writing an article using Word on the iMac, had gone to try printing and for some reason it failed, so he put the part-written tome onto a usb HD. Booted up the big PC, which popped up an invitation to install "OneDrive" and never lose any work again. He ran onedrive.exe, then decided he didn't want it and might have to pay, so cancelled out. He then uploaded his writings onto the PC, finished the article, shut the machine down and went for a rest. This evening he booted the PC and to his horror all his emails and settings had disappeared along with his new article. This was where he rang me. A quick connect to him and poke around, and it looked as if he was logged in as someone else. A further poke around in Windows 10 and eventually we found where to make the user accounts visible ( this seems to have changed recently). It then became apparent that he was logged in as Hisname(2) instead of Hisname. Restarted and all came good. He swears that the only thing he did apart from typing was to run Onedrive.exe. It remains a mystery to both of us how this created a second user (now deleted). As someone else said, "Oh for a stable OS". -- Bill |
#21
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
What he is interested in is whether Toby, the OP, has proceeded with
his purchase and any comments he may have after a few days or weeks of ownership, so I said I would post here to ask the question. I did not. Each time I look into a Mac Pro, Imac, mac mini, used new refurbished, whatever, I'm stopped by the price point. Toby |
#22
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
John Williamson wrote:
The core operating system is stable, and updates to it don't affect programs, while you can opt to only take security updates or the whole bleeding edge, nightly updated experience for the programs. It will tell you at boot that "100 updates are available", all of which you can probably safely ignore if you don't collaborate over the net or don't run a firewall. 99 of those updates are likely only adding features (or changing things for the sake of change) and have nothing to do with security. Only very few of the updates are actually security-related. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#23
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
On Monday, April 29, 2019 at 7:53:49 AM UTC-5, Scott Dorsey wrote:
James Price wrote: I like the Mac, though I do wonder how long Apple can maintain their legacy of innovation in light of Steve Jobs's death. I wish they would just stop it with the innovation! I am trying to get work done! I want a system that is stable. I'm just speaking in general, not necessarily with respect to innovating on something that's perfectly suitable as is. |
#24
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
On 30/04/2019 12:53 AM, Scott Dorsey wrote:
James Price wrote: I like the Mac, though I do wonder how long Apple can maintain their legacy of innovation in light of Steve Jobs's death. I wish they would just stop it with the innovation! I am trying to get work done! I want a system that is stable. --scott Some of the "innovation" from both Apple and MS seems to be to obfuscate where things actually, are without jumping thru unnecessary hoops. At least (Win world at least) you can install something (like Classic Shell) to put things back to several options of the way one likes it, in Classic Shell options of UI workflows all the previous Win versions - Start Menu, File Explorer, etc. I know where I've put things, where I want to put things, and how I want to get to them directly. Without circuitous routes. geoff |
#25
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
On 30/04/2019 8:05 AM, Bill wrote:
In message , Bill writes He is, as I said, primarily a music journalist, writing mainly and often humorously about musicians and jazz. OT, but maybe it will amuse someone. Had a panic call a few minutes ago. He was writing an article using Word on the iMac, had gone to try printing and for some reason it failed, so he put the part-written tome onto a usb HD. Booted up the big PC, which popped up an invitation to install "OneDrive" and never lose any work again. He ran onedrive.exe, then decided he didn't want it and might have to pay, so cancelled out. He then uploaded his writings onto the PC, finished the article, shut the machine down and went for a rest. This evening he booted the PC and to his horror all his emails and settings had disappeared along with his new article. This was where he rang me. A quick connect to him and poke around, and it looked as if he was logged in as someone else. A further poke around in Windows 10 and eventually we found where to make the user accounts visible ( this seems to have changed recently). It then became apparent that he was logged in as Hisname(2) instead of Hisname. Restarted and all came good. He swears that the only thing he did apart from typing was to run Onedrive.exe. It remains a mystery to both of us how this created a second user (now deleted). As someone else said, "Oh for a stable OS". Bet you it was something he did (hint - he needed to call you to fix), and not the OS or OneDrive app. geoff |
#26
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
In article , Tobiah wrote:
What he is interested in is whether Toby, the OP, has proceeded with his purchase and any comments he may have after a few days or weeks of ownership, so I said I would post here to ask the question. I did not. Each time I look into a Mac Pro, Imac, mac mini, used new refurbished, whatever, I'm stopped by the price point. You might want to take a look at these: https://www.serverworlds.com/refurbi...ured-to-order/ I bought a couple of these a few months ago. One is running Ubuntu Mate 18.04 LTS; the other is running FreeBSD 12.0. The Ubuntu install is pretty simple. FreeBSD, on the other hand, takes a day to configure, and probably pretty daunting for someone who isn't comfortable with command-line utilities and the vi editor. But it's a real Unix, and has just about any software you'd want through its package/ports repository. I've bought from this vendor several times over the past 15 or so years, and have always been satisfied with them. Hank |
#27
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
On 30/04/2019 9:44 am, geoff wrote:
On 30/04/2019 8:05 AM, Bill wrote: In message , Bill writes He is, as I said, primarily a music journalist, writing mainly and often humorously about musicians and jazz. OT, but maybe it will amuse someone. Had a panic call a few minutes ago. He was writing an article using Word on the iMac, had gone to try printing and for some reason it failed, so he put the part-written tome onto a usb HD. Booted up the big PC, which popped up an invitation to install "OneDrive" and never lose any work again. He ran onedrive.exe, then decided he didn't want it and might have to pay, so cancelled out. He then uploaded his writings onto the PC, finished the article, shut the machine down and went for a rest. This evening he booted the PC and to his horror all his emails and settings had disappeared along with his new article. This was where he rang me. A quick connect to him and poke around, and it looked as if he was logged in as someone else. A further poke around in Windows 10 and eventually we found where to make the user accounts visible ( this seems to have changed recently). It then became apparent that he was logged in as Hisname(2) instead of Hisname. Restarted and all came good. He swears that the only thing he did apart from typing was to run Onedrive.exe. It remains a mystery to both of us how this created a second user (now deleted). As someone else said, "Oh for a stable OS". Bet you it was something he did (hint - he needed to call you to fix), and not the OS or OneDrive app. Yeah, wish I had a dollar for everyone who "swore the only thing they did......" but simply forgot what they had really done to cause the problem. :-) |
#28
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
On Monday, April 29, 2019 at 8:53:49 AM UTC-4, Scott Dorsey wrote:
James Price wrote: I like the Mac, though I do wonder how long Apple can maintain their legacy of innovation in light of Steve Jobs's death. I wish they would just stop it with the innovation! I am trying to get work done! I want a system that is stable. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." Scott, I thought you were a PC guy! Ty |
#29
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
Ty Ford wrote:
On Monday, April 29, 2019 at 8:53:49 AM UTC-4, Scott Dorsey wrote: James Price wrote: I like the Mac, though I do wonder how long Apple can maintain their legacy of innovation in light of Steve Jobs's death. I wish they would just stop it with the innovation! I am trying to get work done! I want a system that is stable. Scott, I thought you were a PC guy! I'm an Ampex guy! I don't like computers! --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#30
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
Yeah, wish I had a dollar for everyone who "swore the only thing they did......" but simply forgot what they had really done to cause the problem. :-) If I had a dollar for every woman who found me unattractive, they'd find me attractive. |
#31
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
"Tobiah" wrote in message ... Yeah, wish I had a dollar for everyone who "swore the only thing they did......" but simply forgot what they had really done to cause the problem. :-) If I had a dollar for every woman who found me unattractive, they'd find me attractive. LOL! Poly --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
#32
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
In message , geoff
writes Bet you it was something he did (hint - he needed to call you to fix), and not the OS or OneDrive app. Just now he rang again to say that he has all his photos loaded onto the iMac, and tried to copy his recent writing back onto that machine. He then got a message saying that his cloud (as I understand it) automatic sync backup was out of space and would he pay some pennies to increase the storage. He declined, searched for and found how to empty his cloud backup. He followed the instructions and told it that he wanted to keep all the data on the machine. All his icons and access to his writings on the iMac have now disappeared, he says. I have just told him (again) that I know nothing about Macs. He believes he has been backing up to a second external HD, but doesn't know how to restore. He also has all his writings on the Windows machine, so he is OK. I've left him to his devices for a bit. It's a shame because otherwise he is very intelligent, amusing and good company. -- Bill |
#33
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
On 1/05/2019 2:47 AM, Ty Ford wrote:
On Monday, April 29, 2019 at 8:53:49 AM UTC-4, Scott Dorsey wrote: James Price wrote: I like the Mac, though I do wonder how long Apple can maintain their legacy of innovation in light of Steve Jobs's death. I wish they would just stop it with the innovation! I am trying to get work done! I want a system that is stable. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." Scott, I thought you were a PC guy! Ty As long as everything works smoothly in an audio context, I find it hard to get a stiffy over operating systems. What it should be all about is the recording application of choice. Related to that is the range of choices available if one is locked into a particular platform. I developed my choice in a period where Apple and their 'favourites' was somewhat less than democratic wrt DAW software. geoff. |
#34
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
On 1/05/2019 5:45 AM, Bill wrote:
In message , geoff writes Bet you it was something he did (hint - he needed to call you to fix), and not the OS or OneDrive app. Just now he rang again to say that he has all his photos loaded onto the iMac, and tried to copy his recent writing back onto that machine. He then got a message saying that his cloud (as I understand it) automatic sync backup was out of space and would he pay some pennies to increase the storage. He declined, searched for and found how to empty his cloud backup. He followed the instructions and told it that he wanted to keep all the data on the machine. All his icons and access to his writings on the iMac have now disappeared, he says. I have just told him (again) that I know nothing about Macs. He believes he has been backing up to a second external HD, but doesn't know how to restore. He also has all his writings on the Windows machine, so he is OK. I've left him to his devices for a bit. It's a shame because otherwise he is very intelligent, amusing and good company. MS One Drive keeps all the apps in the said 'cloud'. DropBox , which can be used for the same purpose as One Drive, keeps a local folder which mirrors to the 'cloud' version. geoff |
#35
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
On 1/05/2019 2:58 am, Tobiah wrote:
Yeah, wish I had a dollar for everyone who "swore the only thing they did......" but simply forgot what they had really done to cause the problem. :-) If I had a dollar for every woman who found me unattractive, they'd find me attractive. HaHa, but so true. |
#36
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
On 4/30/2019 11:58 AM, Tobiah wrote:
Yeah, wish I had a dollar for everyone who "swore the only thing they did......" but simply forgot what they had really done to cause the problem. :-) If I had a dollar for every woman who found me unattractive, they'd find me attractive. It's a game changer for sure when they realize that bulge in your pants is a roll of $100 bills. |
#37
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
On 29 Apr 2019 12:20:04 -0400, Scott Dorsey wrote:
John Williamson wrote: On 29/04/2019 13:53, Scott Dorsey wrote: James Price wrote: I like the Mac, though I do wonder how long Apple can maintain their legacy of innovation in light of Steve Jobs's death. I wish they would just stop it with the innovation! I am trying to get work done! I want a system that is stable. Me too. Long term support Linux is looking better by the day. I'm not sure if there's a way to transfer Linux based Mac tools to it, though. Depends a lot on the linux distro. A lot of them are much worse than Windows or OSX in that regard. Even Red Hat has gone to systemd and the new gnome bloatware. Linux gets a whole lot of change-for-change's-sake these days which is very disturbing. I find systemd an improvement, its journal has helped me multiple times. I run Mint LongTime Support versions, with XFCE desktop, a bit like Windows XP. I don't like the fat desktops like Gnome. Plus, XFCE has a bar only at the bottom, and you can add monitors for CPU, disk and network load, which I like. Mat Nieuwenhoven |
#38
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
Scott Dorsey wrote:
geoff wrote: On 26/04/2019 11:12 PM, Bill wrote: He still seems besotted with the Mac - he keeps referring to one publisher who has encouraged the move - in spite of my questions of "why?". The expression is "hook, line, and sinker". He now feels superior to the plebes. A bit like an Audi driver, or a vegan. It will keep cropping up early in any conversation that he is involved in now. The nice thing about the mac is that it has a decent command line and you can do everything you need to do from the command line. Which, given their history, is kind of ironic. Windows is starting to get there with Powershell, but controlling ProTools from Powershell is not going to be a pleasant experience. I've added a Tcl interpreter to every computer I've had since the mid 1990s. There are also all the usual Unix tools - - ls, grep etc - ported to Windows available for free. It's really nice to be able to script things and do bulk conversion of files on OSX. Computers are supposed to do repetitive tasks for you, not force you to do them yourself. Linux would have been nice, and there are Linux dialects with pseudo-realtime hooks in the kernel that could have made for a nice audio platform, but really pulseaudio is a disaster. I'm still hoping for someone to develop decent low-level audio support for linux and I'm hoping it happens before the Red Hat people manage to destroy everything with integrated bloat. As much of a horror show as the API is, Windows has had multimedia API support forever. I recall notifications for a meeting where the Linux folk were still trying to figure out what an event in multimedia was. This not long after 2000. If they ain't got it in 28 years... So I kind of think of OSX as a nice compromise... it's a unix-like system with a decent shell, but with good audio support. And yes, Apple's obsession with chasing the latest flashy new thing is a problem, but for a DAW you can just get a system and freeze it. Until a couple years ago I still had a first generation Sonic workstation for CD mastering. It was in the studio for 26 years, then it went straight from the studio to a museum. Apple has apparently started gluing cases together. --scott -- Les Cargill |
#39
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
Les Cargill wrote:
As much of a horror show as the API is, Windows has had multimedia API support forever. I recall notifications for a meeting where the Linux folk were still trying to figure out what an event in multimedia was. This not long after 2000. Yeah, they saw that market. The folks who really did it right were the BeOS team but that kind of died... --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#40
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Always wanted to try a Mac.
On Monday, April 29, 2019 at 1:25:35 PM UTC-7, Tobiah wrote:
I did not. Each time I look into a Mac Pro, Imac, mac mini, used new refurbished, whatever, I'm stopped by the price point. Toby My Mac Pro 5,1, dual 6-core 3.46GHz processors (i.e. a 12-core), 64GB RAM was $1350 on eBay when I bought it almost 2-1/2 years ago. You can find the same machine for little less now. Yeah it's had its processors updated, but it's ten years old and it kicks serious arse for a DAW. My big Logic template - a full orchestra + lots of other things - runs at a 128-sample buffer off SSDs, complete with more plug-ins than I use. |
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