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|  Truly Basic Questions, RQ: Advice on Mac hard/soft ware for music composition/recording | 
|  ven. 18 juin 2010, 12:49 
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| Newbie Groupe : Members Messages : 4 Inscrit : 17 juin 10 Lieu : Olney - US Membre no 114,317  | 
				Currenlty, I run Cubase on Windows, hosting a variety of VST instruments, Native Instruments Kontact, GForce, etc. I have an old Aardvark sound card (that should tell you how old this set-up is), and am currently running the outputs to a 16 track mixer. What I would like to do is this: replace the mixer with an on-board solution---something like RME?---get rid of Windows, for a variety of reasons, and maintain my VSTi's since I've paid for these. I am looking at the Mac platform because I cannot find any realistic support for the VST instruments on a pure Linux platform, but perhaps I'm wrong about this? Anyway, I am hopeful that some kind soul (or kind souls) on this Forum can make some constructive recommendations. 1) My budget is somewhat liberal; I don't expect to do this on the cheap. 2) My primary concerns are reliability and expansion capabilities. 3) Most of the music that I create is MIDI driven; I do play guitars (bass and six string) on some pieces, but am primarily sample/synth based. 4) I am keen to learn new software, and I am thinking that Logic + Reason might be a good starting point. Any ideas, suggestions, or recommendations are welcome. Thank you, in advance Tom R | 
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|  sam. 19 juin 2010, 05:22 
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|  Junior Member    Groupe : Members Messages : 179 Inscrit : 13 mars 04 Lieu : Hawaii North Shore Oahu - US Membre no 38,418  | 
				Aloha Tom! i been using Logic/Rason for years and love it! on the interface i like having the option to  use  it as a control surface , and quit mousing around,here is one    http://www.audiolines.com/Studio-Recording...ref=Jemsite.com | 
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|  dim. 20 juin 2010, 00:29 
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| Newbie Groupe : Members Messages : 4 Inscrit : 17 juin 10 Lieu : Olney - US Membre no 114,317  | Aloha Tom! i been using Logic/Rason for years and love it! on the interface i like having the option to  use  it as a control surface , and quit mousing around,here is one    http://www.audiolines.com/Studio-Recording...ref=Jemsite.com I guess that I need to know some basic facts: For instance, can I run this without having a dedicated hard drive? I'm thinking of going to a Firewire or a USB Audio Interface instead of a PCI. Will this software work with M-Audio or RME? I guess I'm looking for possible machine configurations ... I'm not a hardware guy. In any event: it is good to hear that at least it works for some. TomR | 
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|  lun. 21 juin 2010, 06:15 
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|  Junior Member    Groupe : Members Messages : 179 Inscrit : 13 mars 04 Lieu : Hawaii North Shore Oahu - US Membre no 38,418  | 
				Hey tom,you dont need a dedicated  hard  drive , but is good to have one foe all your music files,   and yes Logic pro and Reason work well ,wiith  MAudio interfaces | 
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|  lun. 21 juin 2010, 12:32 
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| Newbie Groupe : Members Messages : 4 Inscrit : 17 juin 10 Lieu : Olney - US Membre no 114,317  | Hey tom,you dont need a dedicated  hard  drive , but is good to have one foe all your music files,   and yes Logic pro and Reason work well ,wiith  MAudio interfaces Thank you. I suspected that was the case. I guess that the only question remaining is whether looking into a Mac Mini, in order to conserve space, or a Power Book, or, again, just a regular tower. I would prefer the space savings afforded by the Mini (loaded with 8 GB of RAM, I assume), but am would feel better if anyone had any practical experience with this particular box running Logic and/or ProTools. Again, thank you for your response. TomR | 
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