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#1
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Ok...please indulge me guys... since '97 I've stuck with Cubase VST
3.7.... but technology and my old puters are almost done,so.. I need some advice. I have a Dell XPS 420 with Intel Pentium Dual core(4) running at 2.4 Ghz each, with 4 gb of Ram, 1 Terrabyte of hard drive space... I'm considering buying Cubase 4. I have already bought Peavey revalver Mark 3, and considering an Edirol UA101 interface for the firewire connection... will the *on-board* soundcard be a problem?? or do I need to upgrade.. if so which might be best?? and lastly, but most importantly.... my PC is running Vista.. will all this be compatible? any suggestions positive or negative will be greatly received, thankyou in anticipation guys... John. |
#2
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#3
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![]() " wrote: but most importantly.... my PC is running Vista.. Downgrade to XP immediately. If you like the Vista look you can get an XP pack to mimic it. Graham |
#4
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On Wed, 29 Oct 2008 02:39:39 +0000, Eeyore
wrote: but most importantly.... my PC is running Vista.. Downgrade to XP immediately. If you like the Vista look you can get an XP pack to mimic it. But if you like the Vista functions you can easily turn off the annoying eye candy! It's really getting about time to stop knee-jerking against Vista. Sure, if you've got older gear lacking Vista drivers, stay put. Otherwise it's OK. |
#5
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Laurence Payne wrote:
On Wed, 29 Oct 2008 02:39:39 +0000, Eeyore wrote: but most importantly.... my PC is running Vista.. Downgrade to XP immediately. If you like the Vista look you can get an XP pack to mimic it. But if you like the Vista functions you can easily turn off the annoying eye candy! It's really getting about time to stop knee-jerking against Vista. Sure, if you've got older gear lacking Vista drivers, stay put. Otherwise it's OK. Serious question - what does Vista do that XP doesn't do as well or better? d |
#6
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"Don Pearce" wrote ...
Serious question - what does Vista do that XP doesn't do as well or better? It gives MS and their new Hollywood friends DRM. I'm still waiting to hear any significant advantage for the end-user. |
#7
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Don Pearce wrote:
Serious question - what does Vista do that XP doesn't do as well or better? Sell new stuff. If Microsoft actually wanted to build a stable system that actually did work and didn't crash, they'd have done it years ago. The technology to do so dates back to the early 1970s. But they aren't in business to do that, they are in business to make money for their shareholders and selling new products with new bugs are how they do that. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#8
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Scott Dorsey wrote:
Don Pearce wrote: Serious question - what does Vista do that XP doesn't do as well or better? Sell new stuff. If Microsoft actually wanted to build a stable system that actually did work and didn't crash, they'd have done it years ago. The technology to do so dates back to the early 1970s. But they aren't in business to do that, they are in business to make money for their shareholders and selling new products with new bugs are how they do that. --scott I believe they are almost entirely Linux at Redmond - they wouldn't touch Windows with a bargepole. d |
#9
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Don Pearce wrote:
Serious question - what does Vista do that XP doesn't do as well or better? Allows the computer to use more memory than you can possibly afford, or that a reasonable application can ever use. It apparently has some better utility tools (search perhaps?) that are faster and more efficient than XP. There are bound to be some things that it just does better. But since Microsoft only assures that a new OS will work with mainstream applications (mostly Microsoft's own) and there's not yet, thank goodness, a Microsoft DAW and Microsoft audio interface, all support for "our" applications is from a third party or their subcontractors. They have to learn a lot before they can get to work, and the more they know, the better job they can do if allowed the time and money. -- If you e-mail me and it bounces, use your secret decoder ring and reach me he double-m-eleven-double-zero at yahoo -- I'm really Mike Rivers ) |
#10
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![]() "Mike Rivers" wrote in message ... Don Pearce wrote: Serious question - what does Vista do that XP doesn't do as well or better? Allows the computer to use more memory than you can possibly afford, or that a reasonable application can ever use. Sure, XP can use huge amounts of RAM 4 GB. Like any competitive OS including Vista, you have to go to a 64 bit version in order to do that. XP 64 has been around for years - forms of it were delivered back in 2003. |
#11
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Mike Rivers wrote:
Don Pearce wrote: Serious question - what does Vista do that XP doesn't do as well or better? Allows the computer to use more memory than you can possibly afford, or that a reasonable application can ever use. It apparently has some better utility tools (search perhaps?) that are faster and more efficient than XP. There are bound to be some things that it just does better. But since Microsoft only assures that a new OS will work with mainstream applications (mostly Microsoft's own) and there's not yet, thank goodness, a Microsoft DAW and Microsoft audio interface, all support for "our" applications is from a third party or their subcontractors. They have to learn a lot before they can get to work, and the more they know, the better job they can do if allowed the time and money. Interesting - of course we all turn off indexing (I'm sure) so the Microsoft search thing won't work properly anyway. And then we add a third party search tool like Copernic that actually does useful stuff. Luckily that also works with Vista. I have yet to find anything that is faster on Vista than XP. Vista appears to be designed as a counter to Moore's Law. d |
#12
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Don Pearce wrote:
Scott Dorsey wrote: Don Pearce wrote: Serious question - what does Vista do that XP doesn't do as well or better? Sell new stuff. If Microsoft actually wanted to build a stable system that actually did work and didn't crash, they'd have done it years ago. The technology to do so dates back to the early 1970s. But they aren't in business to do that, they are in business to make money for their shareholders and selling new products with new bugs are how they do that. --scott I believe they are almost entirely Linux at Redmond - they wouldn't touch Windows with a bargepole. d Where did you hear this? |
#13
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Romeo Rondeau wrote:
Don Pearce wrote: Scott Dorsey wrote: Don Pearce wrote: Serious question - what does Vista do that XP doesn't do as well or better? Sell new stuff. If Microsoft actually wanted to build a stable system that actually did work and didn't crash, they'd have done it years ago. The technology to do so dates back to the early 1970s. But they aren't in business to do that, they are in business to make money for their shareholders and selling new products with new bugs are how they do that. --scott I believe they are almost entirely Linux at Redmond - they wouldn't touch Windows with a bargepole. d Where did you hear this? Can't remember, but I seem to have a picture in my head of Bill Gates looking sheepish when confronted. d |
#14
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![]() "Don Pearce" wrote in message et... Romeo Rondeau wrote: Don Pearce wrote: I believe they are almost entirely Linux at Redmond - they wouldn't touch Windows with a bargepole. Where did you hear this? Can't remember, but I seem to have a picture in my head of Bill Gates looking sheepish when confronted. Can't be true. What is true that MS probably runs more Linux by accident than most run on purpose, what with competitive studies and all. There might be over 15,000 people working on XP, Vista, and the new system. They have to be running what they are programming if for no reason but testing. Once you have even a barely functional new OS, that is what you run because it optimizes your debugging of it. There are *only* about 30,000 MS people in Redmond, so "almost entirely Linux" just can't be true. |
#15
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Arny Krueger wrote:
"Don Pearce" wrote in message et... Romeo Rondeau wrote: Don Pearce wrote: I believe they are almost entirely Linux at Redmond - they wouldn't touch Windows with a bargepole. Where did you hear this? Can't remember, but I seem to have a picture in my head of Bill Gates looking sheepish when confronted. Can't be true. What is true that MS probably runs more Linux by accident than most run on purpose, what with competitive studies and all. There might be over 15,000 people working on XP, Vista, and the new system. They have to be running what they are programming if for no reason but testing. Once you have even a barely functional new OS, that is what you run because it optimizes your debugging of it. There are *only* about 30,000 MS people in Redmond, so "almost entirely Linux" just can't be true. No, I'm not talking about product development - of course they need to be running the product itself. I'm talking about the the company - accounting, databases, all that sort of stuff that runs the business; that is what the interview was about. d |
#16
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Don Pearce wrote:
Romeo Rondeau wrote: Don Pearce wrote: Scott Dorsey wrote: Don Pearce wrote: Serious question - what does Vista do that XP doesn't do as well or better? Sell new stuff. If Microsoft actually wanted to build a stable system that actually did work and didn't crash, they'd have done it years ago. The technology to do so dates back to the early 1970s. But they aren't in business to do that, they are in business to make money for their shareholders and selling new products with new bugs are how they do that. I believe they are almost entirely Linux at Redmond - they wouldn't touch Windows with a bargepole. Where did you hear this? Can't remember, but I seem to have a picture in my head of Bill Gates looking sheepish when confronted. You are thinking of the silliness about MSN, not Microsoft corporate. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#17
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Scott Dorsey wrote:
Don Pearce wrote: Romeo Rondeau wrote: Don Pearce wrote: Scott Dorsey wrote: Don Pearce wrote: Serious question - what does Vista do that XP doesn't do as well or better? Sell new stuff. If Microsoft actually wanted to build a stable system that actually did work and didn't crash, they'd have done it years ago. The technology to do so dates back to the early 1970s. But they aren't in business to do that, they are in business to make money for their shareholders and selling new products with new bugs are how they do that. I believe they are almost entirely Linux at Redmond - they wouldn't touch Windows with a bargepole. Where did you hear this? Can't remember, but I seem to have a picture in my head of Bill Gates looking sheepish when confronted. You are thinking of the silliness about MSN, not Microsoft corporate. --scott Do you reckon Microsoft Corporate runs its business on Windows boxes? Forgive me if I doubt. d |
#18
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"Don Pearce" wrote ...
Do you reckon Microsoft Corporate runs its business on Windows boxes? Forgive me if I doubt. The factories that develop and manufacture the CPU chip you likely have in your computer run on MSwin (formerly on various flavors of Unix/Linux/***x). In an application where downtime costs US$2M per hour, not a decision taken lightly. |
#19
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"Don Pearce" wrote ...
I have yet to find anything that is faster on Vista than XP. Vista appears to be designed as a counter to Moore's Law. The common rant at the office is that the faster we make the CPUs, the more of the performance is sucked out by the guys in Redmond. |
#20
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Richard Crowley wrote:
"Don Pearce" wrote ... Do you reckon Microsoft Corporate runs its business on Windows boxes? Forgive me if I doubt. The factories that develop and manufacture the CPU chip you likely have in your computer run on MSwin (formerly on various flavors of Unix/Linux/***x). In an application where downtime costs US$2M per hour, not a decision taken lightly. The factory that developed and manufactured the CPU chip I have in my computer was in Hudson, MA, and shut down in 2003. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#21
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"Scott Dorsey" wrote ...
Richard Crowley wrote: "Don Pearce" wrote ... Do you reckon Microsoft Corporate runs its business on Windows boxes? Forgive me if I doubt. The factories that develop and manufacture the CPU chip you likely have in your computer run on MSwin (formerly on various flavors of Unix/Linux/***x). In an application where downtime costs US$2M per hour, not a decision taken lightly. The factory that developed and manufactured the CPU chip I have in my computer was in Hudson, MA, and shut down in 2003. The former DEC fab in Hudson is now Intel Fab 17 and is still running (on MSwin, now :-) |
#22
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![]() "Richard Crowley" wrote in message ... "Don Pearce" wrote ... I have yet to find anything that is faster on Vista than XP. Vista appears to be designed as a counter to Moore's Law. The common rant at the office is that the faster we make the CPUs, the more of the performance is sucked out by the guys in Redmond. Sounds like a mutually beneficial situation. ;-) |
#23
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Richard Crowley wrote:
"Scott Dorsey" wrote ... Richard Crowley wrote: "Don Pearce" wrote ... Do you reckon Microsoft Corporate runs its business on Windows boxes? Forgive me if I doubt. The factories that develop and manufacture the CPU chip you likely have in your computer run on MSwin (formerly on various flavors of Unix/Linux/***x). In an application where downtime costs US$2M per hour, not a decision taken lightly. The factory that developed and manufactured the CPU chip I have in my computer was in Hudson, MA, and shut down in 2003. The former DEC fab in Hudson is now Intel Fab 17 and is still running (on MSwin, now :-) Shameful. That's all I can say. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#24
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"Scott Dorsey" wrote in ...
Richard Crowley wrote: The former DEC fab in Hudson is now Intel Fab 17 and is still running (on MSwin, now :-) Shameful. That's all I can say. Easy for you to say. You are not only a one-man-band but you also run your own computing "infrastructure". It was becoming increasing difficult to find competent employees to support the 20 different flavors of Unix on the 10s of thousands of systems that run the factories. |
#25
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"Arny Krueger" wrote ...
"Richard Crowley" wrote ... "Don Pearce" wrote ... I have yet to find anything that is faster on Vista than XP. Vista appears to be designed as a counter to Moore's Law. The common rant at the office is that the faster we make the CPUs, the more of the performance is sucked out by the guys in Redmond. Sounds like a mutually beneficial situation. ;-) But in both the case of the CPU and the OS, the customer has the ultimate choice. If AMD offers more bang-per-buck, then they flock over there, and vice-versa. And if you have an application that will run on Linnux/etc. then you can skip the MS bloatware. I thought MS was supposed to be working on an efficient, non- bloatware OS variety, but I haven't heard about it recently. |
#26
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Don Pearce wrote in
et: I have yet to find anything that is faster on Vista than XP. Vista appears to be designed as a counter to Moore's Law. The two items that run faster on Vista are Microsoft's and Intel's cash intake. |
#27
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Chris Hornbeck wrote:
Call me cynical (been listening to too much Hank Williams lately, maybe) but Intel's been making some cool new processors aimed at subverting the Main Path. They have a 2.5 watt 1.6GHz processor called an "Atom" that Asus, maybe among others is selling in some really impressive little (10" screens, and smaller... Oy! - I hate young people) laptops called EeePC's and in tiny desktops called Eee Box's. If it's an x86, it's not cool. Intel HAS made some really cool processors, including the i860 and i960. And I still think the 8051 is cool, and there's probably one in your TV set or toaster. Both come with usable amounts of memory and! TADA! Windows XP. And for very small bux. It's a whole Second Front. The x86 is just not a very elegant architecture overall, but we're stuck with it, and such huge amounts of money have been put into getting the best possible speed out of it that it's driven everything else out of the market. I think that's a shame, but it _is_ fast and cheap anyway, and there is a lot to be said for that. --scott The itanium2 COULD have been cool, but some things seem to have gone wrong somewhere along the way. It's interesting, though, and I have kind of liked it although I think adding the x86 compatibility mode was a bad idea. It leads people to believe they can actually run x86 code, when in fact it's so slow they can't really. -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#28
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#29
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"Richard Crowley" so you saynews:6ms32aFins5pU1
@mid.individual.net: I thought MS was supposed to be working on an efficient, non- bloatware OS variety, but I haven't heard about it recently. They just released a few details about Windows 7. It's suppossed to come in different or configurable flavors depending on your need for bloat. |
#30
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Richard Crowley wrote:
"Scott Dorsey" wrote in ... Richard Crowley wrote: The former DEC fab in Hudson is now Intel Fab 17 and is still running (on MSwin, now :-) Shameful. That's all I can say. Easy for you to say. You are not only a one-man-band but you also run your own computing "infrastructure". It was becoming increasing difficult to find competent employees to support the 20 different flavors of Unix on the 10s of thousands of systems that run the factories. I don't think it is any harder to find competent Windows people... I think it's just that there are a lot of people out there who know enough Windows to get by. In a lot of environments, that's enough, but I would hope for better in an embedded control environment. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#31
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"Scott Dorsey" wrote...
Richard Crowley wrote: "Scott Dorsey" wrote in ... Richard Crowley wrote: The former DEC fab in Hudson is now Intel Fab 17 and is still running (on MSwin, now :-) Shameful. That's all I can say. Easy for you to say. You are not only a one-man-band but you also run your own computing "infrastructure". It was becoming increasing difficult to find competent employees to support the 20 different flavors of Unix on the 10s of thousands of systems that run the factories. I don't think it is any harder to find competent Windows people... I think it's just that there are a lot of people out there who know enough Windows to get by. In a lot of environments, that's enough, but I would hope for better in an embedded control environment. Perhaps, but there are these significant factors (and likely others).... 1) A single OS (and version) vs. a nearly infinite number of Unix/ Linux/Sunos/et.al. brands, flavors, distributions, versions, and builds. 2) A single target for vendors to interface with (vs. #1 above) 3) Fairly rigorous certification in many specific areas of competency. 4) Real support from a commercial vendor. (Granted, only when one is a huge multi-national corp with lots of $$$, but then as you say, there is a lot at stake.) I must admit that the reliability appears to be significantly up since we emigrated from the balkanized Unix/Linix/Sunox/et.al. landscape. |
#32
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Richard Crowley wrote:
"Scott Dorsey" wrote... Richard Crowley wrote: "Scott Dorsey" wrote in ... Richard Crowley wrote: The former DEC fab in Hudson is now Intel Fab 17 and is still running (on MSwin, now :-) Shameful. That's all I can say. Easy for you to say. You are not only a one-man-band but you also run your own computing "infrastructure". It was becoming increasing difficult to find competent employees to support the 20 different flavors of Unix on the 10s of thousands of systems that run the factories. I don't think it is any harder to find competent Windows people... I think it's just that there are a lot of people out there who know enough Windows to get by. In a lot of environments, that's enough, but I would hope for better in an embedded control environment. Perhaps, but there are these significant factors (and likely others).... 1) A single OS (and version) vs. a nearly infinite number of Unix/ Linux/Sunos/et.al. brands, flavors, distributions, versions, and builds. 2) A single target for vendors to interface with (vs. #1 above) 3) Fairly rigorous certification in many specific areas of competency. 4) Real support from a commercial vendor. (Granted, only when one is a huge multi-national corp with lots of $$$, but then as you say, there is a lot at stake.) I must admit that the reliability appears to be significantly up since we emigrated from the balkanized Unix/Linix/Sunox/et.al. landscape. I imagine that the Balkans will eventually be overpowered by the Chinese -- Dirk http://www.transcendence.me.uk/ - Transcendence UK http://www.theconsensus.org/ - A UK political party http://www.onetribe.me.uk/wordpress/?cat=5 - Our podcasts on weird stuff |
#33
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Richard Crowley wrote:
"Scott Dorsey" wrote in ... Richard Crowley wrote: The former DEC fab in Hudson is now Intel Fab 17 and is still running (on MSwin, now :-) Shameful. That's all I can say. Easy for you to say. You are not only a one-man-band but you also run your own computing "infrastructure". It was becoming increasing difficult to find competent employees to support the 20 different flavors of Unix on the 10s of thousands of systems that run the factories. Sometimes it's cheaper to fix things than let them run as they are.... -- Les Cargill |
#34
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Les Cargill wrote:
Richard Crowley wrote: "Scott Dorsey" wrote in ... Richard Crowley wrote: The former DEC fab in Hudson is now Intel Fab 17 and is still running (on MSwin, now :-) Shameful. That's all I can say. Easy for you to say. You are not only a one-man-band but you also run your own computing "infrastructure". It was becoming increasing difficult to find competent employees to support the 20 different flavors of Unix on the 10s of thousands of systems that run the factories. Sometimes it's cheaper to fix things than let them run as they are.... The last I looked, that facility was running lots of RT-11 and VaxELN.... --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#35
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Scott Dorsey wrote:
Les Cargill wrote: Richard Crowley wrote: "Scott Dorsey" wrote in ... Richard Crowley wrote: The former DEC fab in Hudson is now Intel Fab 17 and is still running (on MSwin, now :-) Shameful. That's all I can say. Easy for you to say. You are not only a one-man-band but you also run your own computing "infrastructure". It was becoming increasing difficult to find competent employees to support the 20 different flavors of Unix on the 10s of thousands of systems that run the factories. Sometimes it's cheaper to fix things than let them run as they are.... The last I looked, that facility was running lots of RT-11 and VaxELN.... --scott I had to look both those up. I don't feel too bad for remembering pSOS so fondly now.... -- Les Cargill |
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