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My experience was that, while doing a multitrack recording, every few minutes all tracks being recorded would have their signals replaced by a horrible buzz. I think it's because the firewire and usb shared the same interrupt (not changeable), but I was never sure. I tried using a firewire on a PCMCIA card instead of the built-in, but that did not help. Unfortunately, I didn't figure all this out during whatever period I had to return the unit. I had to abandon the piece of crap for audio purposes. Fortunately, I had other uses for it. I don't know how you could know this in advance about a particular model of computer. Like I said, my desktop PC runs Windows, and it does audio perfectly. I'm guessing that my experiences are not the norm, but this incident - and one other experience, not related to multimedia - have got me off DELL for good. I do not wish to start flame wars (in fact, I *don't* believe that the Apple UI and OS is necessarily superior or inferior to Windows - I use both); however, with an Apple, at least you know that all the hw is compatible, while PCs are built from a widely varying component and motherboard assortment (to an extreme), which naturally leads to more uncertainty in the way that the components interact. Best wishes, Warren Sirota > -----Original Message----- > From: Gary Lehmann [mailto:hqr@cox.net] > Sent: Thursday, December 29, 2005 1:55 PM > To: Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com > Subject: laptop for live music > > > I will need another laptop sooner rather than later, as > latest versions of software require something more powerful. > The Dell I have used creates hum on the digital > audio--Warren, is that your experience as well? Gary > -----Original Message----- > From: Warren Sirota wrote: > <snip> > On the PC side, I have a DELL laptop that is poorly > engineered for audio, despite being marketed as a multimedia > laptop - it has never worked consistently. > >