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Sure! I tried out the Node system the day it was released and it works very well with Logic's own plug-ins and instruments. Due to copyright issues you Apple can not allow that power to third-party plug-is like for example Kontakt. I hooked up my old 1.25 MB PPC cpu PowerBook to a much stornger Mac and was able to run a recording project on the crappy laptop that exceeded it's CPU capacity with more than 300 percent. We used to call the Distributed Processing feature "a Pro Tools Killer" but today it seems like it is Digidesign that unleashes "a Logic Killer" ;-) He, he.. but seriously, the Node function in Logic is truly unique lets you stack several cheap but strong Mac Mini boxes to do the hard CPU work in the background. However, in real life I have never undertaken a project so CPU demanding that I have even needed to look into this function. I just tested it for a musician magazine once because I had to write a review. It's good to know there is unlimited power handy, if you should run into a situation where you need it. Greetings from Sweden Per Boysen www.boysen.se (Swedish) www.looproom.com (international) www.ubetoo.com/Artist.taf?_ArtistId=6550 On Fri, Jan 2, 2009 at 1:45 PM, Warren Sirota <wsirota@wsdesigns.com> wrote: > I was browsing through part of the copious documentation that comes with > Logic and noticed, to my surprise, that it includes a way to offload >some of > the processing to another machine. I didn't study it closely, so I didn't > notice whether that meant an arbitrary machine on the network, or there >had > to be some special Firewire coupling, but I was impressed. > > Just wondering if anyone here has tried distributed processing with >Logic? > Might be the best way to get extra bang for the buck on the next computer > upgrade - keep the old computer and use it as an auxiliary processor. > > >