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#1
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I have always seen, in live music, that musicians like dj's and rockers and
so many others, tend to use macintosh laptops to produce music. But I have never seen this people using pc laptops. I think that the reason is the macintosh software because there are some programas only available for mac and not for pc, but I hesitate this. Is it the reason for the preference of musicians for macintosh laptops the software or the stability or the operating system ? Perhaps a laptop pc with windows could "hung", but could a laptop pc with linux and audio software be as good as a macintosh ? Thanks ! |
#2
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"Horacio" writes:
I have always seen, in live music, that musicians like dj's and rockers and so many others, tend to use macintosh laptops to produce music. But I have never seen this people using pc laptops. I think that the reason is the macintosh software because there are some programas only available for mac and not for pc, but I hesitate this. Is it the reason for the preference of musicians for macintosh laptops the software or the stability or the operating system ? It is for me. I've DJ'd using my iBook with iTunes and a PC running win2k. I don't do this for a living, and in the 3 weddings I've DJ'd for, I managed to have a program lock up on the PC (but thankfully kept playing the tune) and I've never had so much as a whimper of an issue with the iBook and iTunes. And my iBook is friggin 5 years old. You can take this as balanced advice because I'm far from a Mac zealot, and use PC's for most of my real job work. Perhaps a laptop pc with windows could "hung", but could a laptop pc with linux and audio software be as good as a macintosh ? Possibly if you restrict your needs to digital audio playback. I restrict that because audio playback is pretty mature and nearly everyone is doing it. Rich multimedia creation software under Linux though--there isn't a huge audience there, so the experience base of monkeys banging on keyboards finding all bugs in available software just isn't there on Linux, while media creators are doing an awful lot of that on Macs (and PC's too). The achilles heel of the PC for stability is typically Windows and its apps, and its device drivers. You're likely to have a more stable experience comparing *nix to *nix, so a PC running Linux is likely to be more comparable to the stability of a Mac (which is BSD UNIX under the covers). The other issue worth mentioning here is that stability is easier to attain on a Mac because there is far less hardware for anyone to worry about, and device drivers aren't the headache they are in the PC world. This is one benefit of having fewer 3rd party suppliers (although it comes at the cost of things being a little more expensive). Best Regards, -- /"\ ASCII Ribbon Campaign | Todd H \ / | http://www.toddh.net/ X Promoting good netiquette | http://triplethreatband.com/ / \ http://www.toddh.net/netiquette/ | "4 lines suffice." |
#3
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Believe me, I do *NOT* mean to sound like a Mac snob, but, at least in
my experience, the reason I chose the Mac over the PC was, in fact, the stability of the operating system. I AM NOT TRYING TO START A FLAME WAR OR DEBATE ABOUT MAC VS. PC!!! I am simply stating why I personally chose the Mac over the PC. When I decided to computerize my studio, two factors helped me make my decision: 1) The overwhelming prevalence of Macs over PCs in the professional audio/video production world. All of those different people must know something! 2) My own friends' problems using PCs for audio recording. I kept hearing about crash after crash, as well as other time-consuming technical difficulties. Of course, I must add that there is a distinct possibility that the computers they are using are simply not powerful enough; I must confess I do not know exactly what configurations they are using. I am fully aware that there ARE PCs who can easily handle the most demanding audio/video work, but amongst my circle of friends, nobody I know seems to have one. And I have to say that I have yet to experience a crash with my G5! (*knock on wood*) |
#4
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EADGBE wrote:
Believe me, I do *NOT* mean to sound like a Mac snob, but, at least in my experience, the reason I chose the Mac over the PC was, in fact, the stability of the operating system. You know what is REALLY stable? Actual instruments. Sure, a fiddle goes out of tune and you have to rosin it up all the time, but I never saw one of them crash in the middle of a performance with a stack trace on the screen. And it sounds good too. Yeah, guitars break strings now and then, but it's field-replaceable. I've even seen Les Paul play on four strings while replacing the fifth one at the same time. People get all het up about computers here in rec.audio.pro. But frankly if you want something stable and reliable for live performances, you should consider musical instruments instead. (Admittedly musicians are not always stable and reliable, but I don't see software being the solution to that either). --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#5
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On Mon, 20 Jun 2005 07:45:08 -0700, EADGBE wrote:
Believe me, I do *NOT* mean to sound like a Mac snob, but, at least in my experience, the reason I chose the Mac over the PC was, in fact, the stability of the operating system. I AM NOT TRYING TO START A FLAME WAR OR DEBATE ABOUT MAC VS. PC!!! I am simply stating why I personally chose the Mac over the PC. When I decided to computerize my studio, two factors helped me make my decision: 1) The overwhelming prevalence of Macs over PCs in the professional audio/video production world. All of those different people must know something! 2) My own friends' problems using PCs for audio recording. I kept hearing about crash after crash, as well as other time-consuming technical difficulties. Of course, I must add that there is a distinct possibility that the computers they are using are simply not powerful enough; I must confess I do not know exactly what configurations they are using. I am fully aware that there ARE PCs who can easily handle the most demanding audio/video work, but amongst my circle of friends, nobody I know seems to have one. And I have to say that I have yet to experience a crash with my G5! (*knock on wood*) In my experience it does not matter if you use Mac, Windows, Linux or an AtariST in live performance. The most reliable system is whichever one you have spent time testing and retesting in rehearsal, and made absolutely sure works as perfectly as possible. There is no reason it will suddenly become less reliable just because there is an audience. I just finished a three month tour with a Carillon rack mounted PC running Ableton as part of the rig. We had no glitches or crashes or mechanical problems at all. The software on it has not been changed or updated in almost any way since the machine was purchased. (And that's part of the secret to reliable computers, particularly with Windows, don't fiddle! ![]() Windows PCs can be a nightmare for some people, but there are two main reasons.. either they are using a big pile of cracked software or they enjoy playing with music software more than they enjoy making music, so reliability is not their priority. |
#6
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EADGBE wrote:
1) The overwhelming prevalence of Macs over PCs in the professional audio/video production world. This just isn't true any more. 2) My own friends' problems using PCs for audio recording. I kept hearing about crash after crash, as well as other time-consuming technical difficulties. Yes, there is plenty of that. Chalk it up (mostly) to the huge hardware diversity -- as others have mentioned. |
#7
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![]() "Kurt Albershardt" wrote in message ... EADGBE wrote: 1) The overwhelming prevalence of Macs over PCs in the professional audio/video production world. This just isn't true any more. my mac g4 was leftn the pavment and run over by a truck last weekend I am hesitant to invest in a new mac before the intel chipsets are in use and debugged so I bout a IM thinkpad(used) and I can not even begin to describe how much harder it is to use than the mac for live audio applications I am glad I only spent 400$ on it, including a clean instal of wndz 2000 pro but asap I will be going back to mac they just simply kick pc ass for everything I do(except invoicing) ymmv George |
#8
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![]() Scott Dorsey wrote: EADGBE wrote: Believe me, I do *NOT* mean to sound like a Mac snob, but, at least in my experience, the reason I chose the Mac over the PC was, in fact, the stability of the operating system. You know what is REALLY stable? Actual instruments. Sure, a fiddle goes out of tune and you have to rosin it up all the time, but I never saw one of them crash in the middle of a performance with a stack trace on the screen. And it sounds good too. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." Oh Scott. I surmise that you've never seen a Celtic band playing on St. Patrick's Day. I've seen plenty of fiddle players lock up. Phil Brown |
#9
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![]() Horacio wrote: I have always seen, in live music, that musicians like dj's and rockers and so many others, tend to use macintosh laptops to produce music. But I have never seen this people using pc laptops. I think that the reason is the macintosh software because there are some programas only available for mac and not for pc, but I hesitate this. Is it the reason for the preference of musicians for macintosh laptops the software or the stability or the operating system ? Perhaps a laptop pc with windows could "hung", but could a laptop pc with linux and audio software be as good as a macintosh ? I have some experience with Linux audio. If you were to better spell out your requirements it would be easier to tell if Linux will do what you need. |
#10
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George Gleason wrote:
"Kurt Albershardt" wrote in message ... EADGBE wrote: The overwhelming prevalence of Macs over PCs in the professional audio/video production world. This just isn't true any more. my mac g4 was leftn the pavment and run over by a truck last weekend Sorry to hear that. I am hesitant to invest in a new mac before the intel chipsets are in use and debugged Aha - the Osbornization begins... I bought a IM thinkpad(used) and I can not even begin to describe how much harder it is to use than the mac for live audio applications IMO this still depends more on the application and the individual PC hardware more than it does on the OS. Note my comment was not as to which was better per se but about the prevalence of the two. |
#11
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I am running win2k for 15 months on a 2.4 GHz celeron without any
problem.IMHO the difference between a mac and a pc is that the mac comes with a typical, standard configuration while the pc user can choose from dozens of manufacturers of motherboards, hard disks, etc.(only two for processors).And for windows there are millions of applications, I even have japanese on my computer,and the price is low for pcs, mine cost only 700 euro. celeron 2.4 GHz QDI P4 848 i hitachi deskstar 80 GB 7200 rpm Pixelview geforce 4 mx 440 agp 8x 64 MB ddr 512 MB DDR miro 17 " CRT LG cd-rom teac cd r/w maxball keybo+mouse black floppy lexmark z605 inkjet braintrust 300 W case win 2000 greek autocad r14 I even run doom 3 @ 1024X768@ high so you see I am also a professional user -- Tzortzakakis Dimitrios major in electrical engineering, freelance electrician FH von Iraklion-Kreta, freiberuflicher Elektriker dimtzort AT otenet DOT gr ? "Noah Roberts" ?????? ??? ?????? oups.com... Horacio wrote: I have always seen, in live music, that musicians like dj's and rockers and so many others, tend to use macintosh laptops to produce music. But I have never seen this people using pc laptops. I think that the reason is the macintosh software because there are some programas only available for mac and not for pc, but I hesitate this. Is it the reason for the preference of musicians for macintosh laptops the software or the stability or the operating system ? Perhaps a laptop pc with windows could "hung", but could a laptop pc with linux and audio software be as good as a macintosh ? I have some experience with Linux audio. If you were to better spell out your requirements it would be easier to tell if Linux will do what you need. |
#12
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On Tue, 21 Jun 2005 09:36:10 -0400, Dana Larsen wrote:
On Mon, 20 Jun 2005 17:18:47 +0000, philicorda wrote: In my experience it does not matter if you use Mac, Windows, Linux or an AtariST in live performance. The most reliable system is whichever one you have spent time testing and retesting in rehearsal, and made absolutely sure works as perfectly as possible. Good advice! There is no reason it will suddenly become less reliable just because there is an audience. In theory yes, but you know how it goes. The gremlins always seem to wake up when they have an audience. I put a little strip of gaffa across the front of the rack so the computer can't see what's going on. Fools it into thinking it's just a rehearsal. Ask Bill Gates about his various live *performances* which seem to crash more than they should. The main problem with Windows for me is that it's very difficult to troubleshoot on location if it does go wrong. You either need an internet connection or some way of re-installing/reimaging back to a working config. If the apps require challenge/response authentication and you don't have a disk image then it's a day of entering serial numbers on line as well. I've been lucky so far. I feel happier troubleshooting on Linux systems where things are a bit more modular and tweakable though. I just finished a three month tour with a Carillon rack mounted PC running Ableton as part of the rig. We had no glitches or crashes or mechanical problems at all. Same here. I used a carefully built and selected franken-computer installed in a rack system (Windows XP). It ran like a champ. The software on it has not been changed or updated in almost any way since the machine was purchased. (And that's part of the secret to reliable computers, particularly with Windows, don't fiddle! ![]() If it ain't broke.......... Windows PCs can be a nightmare for some people, but there are two main reasons.. either they are using a big pile of cracked software or they enjoy playing with music software more than they enjoy making music, so reliability is not their priority. OMG YES!!! I've set up systems for other musicians and invariably six months down the road I get "the call". My system is slow, unstable, crashes etc. Without exception it's generally due to tons of garbage software that the person has added to the system. Every time. I resorted to restricted user accounts and password protection on bios/admin for an eight computer music tuition room running win2k. The people I set it up for called me a year later, asking for the passwords. I'd given the passwords to them originally, but they had not recognised their importance and promptly lost them all. It was nice they had not needed admin passwords for a year, but also a pain as I did not have the passwords either. ![]() Fortunately I keep an image of the original load so it's a quick fix but some people just don't get it. Oddly enough I have one friend who plays keys and just leaves the thing alone because it works for him. I have a mac owning friend who when asked what computer he had, just stared blankly and said 'the one that comes with digital performer.'. ![]() He is a stock broker by day and the SEC has very stiff rules about software installed on traders pc's so he needs 5 levels of management approval to install anything not company approved. They've trained him well! |
#13
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Horacio wrote:
I have always seen, in live music, that musicians like dj's and rockers and so many others, tend to use macintosh laptops to produce music. But I have never seen this people using pc laptops. I second that. My favourite female musician (who's neither a DJ nor a rocker, and requested not to be named here) can be seen frequently (during live concerts) to kneel down centre stage in front of some Apple laptop and type something before the next song starts. Is it the reason for the preference of musicians for macintosh laptops the software or the stability or the operating system ? As much as I'd like to believe that, my experience with Mac OS X stability has been rather dismal. Not wanting her to use Redmond OS I put my wife onto OS X five years ago, and boy, what a ride. I wonder whether my unnamed favourite female artist ever encountered the beach ball of death mid concert. Maybe pro's are using OS 9... Perhaps a laptop pc with windows could "hung", but could a laptop pc with linux and audio software be as good as a macintosh ? I'll say, from the stability standpoint at least. Though it seems audio quality/versatility isn't a forté of Linux, yet. Cheers Steffen. |
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