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I'm not sure I checked it correctly, but I didn't see anything about via anything. The laptop is a fairly new Acer Aspire 5670 with an Intel Core Duo processor and a gig of DDR. Hopefully it won't give me any problems. --Josh > I'm using a tascam fw1804 both live and in my studio. It is 8 in and 2 > outs > analog plus 1 i/o adat (8 channel in/out 24 bit 48khz) and 1 i/o spdif >(24 > bit 96 khz) plus 2 midi in and 4 midi outs. I use it in studio with a > behringer digital mixer (via adat i/o) and live with a behringer a/d/a >(24 > bit 48 khz) with very little latency time (I tried it with both guitar >rig > and amplitube live). The only thing you should look in your laptop is > which > firewire chipset has it got. Almost all the fw soundcards I have tried > have > problems with the via chipset. > > Peace > Luigi > > -----Original Message----- > From: Buzap Buzap [mailto:buzap@gmx.net] > Sent: mercoledì 7 giugno 2006 13.45 > To: Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com > Subject: Re: AW: laptop audio I/O hardware in your price range? > > I just bought a Mackie Onyx 1220 to replace my old multitracker. > The advantage for looping imo: > - it has a real Stereo-Bus (Aux3/4) that you can route directly to your > looping device with a switch (i.e. switch quickly source for looping from > vocals, keyboard, guitar, ...) > - all input signals (pre-fader/eq) are sent via firewire to your computer > > Look out for promotions where they give you the FW-interface for free! > Great > buy. > > Best regards > Buzap > > -- > > > "Feel free" – 10 GB Mailbox, 100 FreeSMS/Monat ... > Jetzt GMX TopMail testen: http://www.gmx.net/de/go/topmail > >