Edirol has some wonderful hardware/software called motion dive. Heres a link.
On Mar 20, 2008, at 4:09 PM, Kevin Cheli-Colando wrote: Thanks for the replies so far. I'm afraid my original message was supposed to be longer but it got accidentally sent before I was finished. But that's fine as the answers are still covering what I was hoping to ask more or less. As far as video, I'm talking about live image manipulation so I'm not sure what I would need to pull that off successfully (beside the talent I suppose).
I'm pretty sure the Macs would take care of my needs just fine so I guess my only real question is if there is a cheaper PC route that would be as effective. So far it sounds hit or miss as far as they're concerned. Anyone have any thoughts about buying used?
Thanks again,
Kevin
On Thu, Mar 20, 2008 at 12:59 PM, Jeff Larson < jeff.larson@sailpoint.com> wrote: New computers are pretty darn fast these days. Unless you want to run lots of VST plugins at the same time or do intensive things like video editing a mid-range processor will be fine. For basic looping I doubt you can even buy the minimum processor any more, everything will be more than you need. A 2.4GHz Dual core is plenty. I'm not sure what "video control and projection work" means. If it is just sending occasional control messages to a video device then you don't need much. If you are actually doing real-time video processing on the computer then you may need more. Whatever you do get 2GB, memory is dirt cheap right now. First set a price range. There are roughly three ranges: above $2000, between $1000 and $2000, and below $1000. The Macbook you mention (assuming we're not talking about the "pro") is around $1300. The Macbook Pros start at $2000. If you're trying to go below $1000 then you will have to look at PC laptops. You should be able to find something that meets your needs but it is a gamble. You don't need the fastest processor available but at the low end corners get cut that can affect audio performance. You will want a video card with dedicated memory, some of the low-end laptops may not offer that. You will need to factor in between $200 to $500 for a firewire audio interface depending in your needs. If $1300 doesn't bother you then think about the software you want to run and make the Mac vs PC decision. If $2000 doesn't bother you then I would agree with the others, get a Macbook Pro and be happy. You can still run XP on it if you want PC software but you will have to buy a license which can be tricky if you don't have one laying around. Jeff
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Till now you seriously considered yourself to be the body and to have a form. That is the primal ignorance which is the root cause of all trouble.
- Ramana Maharshi (1879-1950) Sound and Vision: http://www.minds-eye.org |