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> so whats would you be looking at now if you had a budget of £400 - $600 >go ebaying for old stuff or look at something like the korg microsampler? So that's a budget of $600-$660 ;)? I will now assume you meant to type $400-$600... > i cant get my head around the specs, i live in a world where my nintendo DS has a 16 GB micro SD card in it , yet many of the samplers im looking at > surely someone in the tech world is still making this kind of stuff? Let's face it: the high-quality hardware sampler has (almost) vanished from the market. People who had been using something like an Akai S series, E-Mu Emulator or similar in a studio setting in the past use a computer today. Example: NI Kontakt 4. People who used one onstage use a synth workstation where you can load samples (those devices don't have a sampling option, because - yes, you guessed right - people use a computer for this). Example: Roland Fantom XR. The only hardware samplers (being things that not only can playback but also record samples) seem to be aimed at the more beat-oriented/DJ crowd - apart frm things like a Roland SP-555, there' still the Akai MPC series. > the irony is, i think i know the answer and its.....yup.on a laptop!!!! Here, you said it yourself... Ah, and if that weren't enough, storing and transferring data with those older devices is often a hassle. The standard for this used to be SCSI (which means SCSI harddisk and SCSI interface for your computer). Perhaps the simple solution really IS to use a sound module with sounds you like, and go with that...;)