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New Macbook Pro's (pg. 4)
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Lolo
afaik, imacs as much as macbook pros recognize both kinds of tension automatically. it's in the specs on the apple website mate.

Temptin macbook pro's, and best of it all, removable hd. Too bad about only 8 gb of ram though. A rapid calculation gives me 4049 Euros for the biggest model with 512 SSD built-in. The 27" iMac with 16gb of RAM and better peformance is 3750. Less portable, nonremovable hd, but that's also a beast.


I don't know about myself, I'll have to wait anyway.
Senator Clay Davis
quote:
recognize both kinds of tension

what are you saying lolo? that they have touch now? both capacitive and resistive?


btw: so how do you connect that thunderbolt to a HDMI/DVI external screen? the very least thing i needed was a new standard.
Lolo
no... I was talking about electrical tension.

mini displayport to hdmi or minidisplayport to dvi for 29 bucks and you're set.
Senator Clay Davis
new line doesnt have minidisplayport, only thunderbolt.
farris
quote:
Originally posted by Senator Clay Davis
new line doesnt have minidisplayport, only thunderbolt.

It's a combined connection.You can still use your 'old' minidisplayport adapters.
DJ RANN
quote:
Originally posted by Lolo
no... I was talking about electrical tension.

mini displayport to hdmi or minidisplayport to dvi for 29 bucks and you're set.


You're right - imacs have autoswitching power supplies in them. You just need the really cheap plug adaptor so the pins fit in whatever socket you're going in to.

@Drogtech - little bit of advice: if you don't know that you can't use VST's on a mac (without a wrapper etc) then I would suggest a little more eduction on software/computer technology before spending $1000+ on a computer.

Look for the stickies at the top of this forum - there's great info in there that will help you make an informed decision.
meriter
Just so you guys know the Macbook Pros are shipping with Intel's new 'Sandybridge' processor which supposedly has built in DRM and an CPU killswitch via 3G. Here are some articles:

http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer...s-hollywood-drm

http://www.techspot.com/news/41643-...ill-switch.html

http://www.tgdaily.com/hardware-opi...s-of-intels-vpr
Mad for Brad
not sure how killing the CPU will stop thieves from stealing your laptop, get you your laptop back or stop them from looking on your hardrive. Kinda stupid and funny if someone develops a hack that fries every sandybridge in a 10 block radius.
Senator Clay Davis
are yyu guys seruous? does the new iMac work on both 110V and 230V?? that is fukcing imence ! my mixer (AHXONE32) does that too. nothing more i love than universal powersupply,,.god im drunk
Lolo
on a sidenote, can anyone (mfb?) tell me how a mac pro compares to let's say an i7 iMac? I've read all the benchmarks, but I'd like the true advice of someone I know for using about the same kind of instruments as I do (logic 9, multi-gb libraries, spectrasonics instruments, and a few hi-end plugins too).

I used a mac pro a few times and was amazed by the number of cores, but I know on forehand that the kind of instruments that I use today need something a little bit more... professional than a 2 year old laptop.

Really with those new cpu's and co, I don't know anymore. And my crappy c2d is getting in trouble when the angels want to sing hehehe...

kitphillips
quote:
Originally posted by aNYthing
Ugh... quad core CPUs have been out for ages (albeit not "I" series). I doubt that stability was the primary factor, as Quad Cores are and have been quite stable for some time. Price factor may have played a role, if I had to guess... but then again, Apple charges top buck for their systems, would have been nice to leverage Quad Cores for the money people, including myself, have spent.

And congrats on being a Windows-based Ableton user, you and your friends must feel confident in your systems and probably spent a substantial amount of time ensuring it's stable. Not many people, given the choice, would say "it's all the same". I've seen some myself, however, when asked about stability on Win7 - many have said "yeah, I've had some crashes". Not to say that Macs are error-free. I've seen PvD's rig in Central park, running on Mac, blow up and forcing him to reboot with a live drummer trying to keep crowd moving while PvD was rebooting. happens on any computer, it just tends to happen less with Macs, IMO.

And don't be a hypocrite - you're being a Windows fanboi yourself when you're reaching for personal attacks, instead of providing some stats to back your theory up. Fact: more live performers use Macs vs PCs. Prove me wrong, go ahead.


You're making the claim so how about you provide the stats. Also quad core hasn't been out for ages, intel just had a couple of quad core CPUs that were very occasionallly used. It really only started getting heavy use in laptops with the i7 series.

I didn't spend a lot of time ensuring stability actually. My setup usually runs flawlessly. Ableton rigs have less problems than CDJs IME. CDJs fail more than ableton on either mac or PC, and crowds are used to that.

I'm not being a windows fanboi at all, you're just making stacks of claims without any numbers to back them up. I don't even care about this debate tbh, you can spend your money on whatever system you like, I know that mine's stable, and I honestly don't care what proportion of other musicians use macs

quote:
Originally posted by Storyteller
I'm going to take the leap and say none is better. The entire idea of one OS being better than the other is a thing of the past but a lot of people just haven't caught up with that yet. They're different but all very capable and stable, but none of them are perfect. It's just a decision based on personaly preference and experience, no more no less.


I'd agree with that I think.
Mad for Brad
quote:
Originally posted by Lolo
on a sidenote, can anyone (mfb?) tell me how a mac pro compares to let's say an i7 iMac? I've read all the benchmarks, but I'd like the true advice of someone I know for using about the same kind of instruments as I do (logic 9, multi-gb libraries, spectrasonics instruments, and a few hi-end plugins too).

I used a mac pro a few times and was amazed by the number of cores, but I know on forehand that the kind of instruments that I use today need something a little bit more... professional than a 2 year old laptop.

Really with those new cpu's and co, I don't know anymore. And my crappy c2d is getting in trouble when the angels want to sing hehehe...


The mac pro's are not really a good bang for your buck lately. Unless you need hardrive space and lots of ram which was my main concern, the imac is a much better purchase. The 8 core mac pro is just a little bit more powerful than my previous mac pro from early 2009. Another thing about many cores is that logic just doesn't use them properly. I think this is more a concern for people using Kontakt and large sample libraries. THe problem is that logic forces any instrument to only use one core so if you have an instrument with any aux channels, everything will only be processed by one core. It is possible to have your cpu maxed out by only one instrument despite having all the other cores free. Really frustrating. This happens on the imac but the bottleneck happens so often that the CPU power of the mac pro just doesn't matter in the end.

I felt a little cheated buying the new mac pro but oh well.
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