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New Equipment - Starting Out, Wanting some advice on how to start out |
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Sun 18 Apr 2004, 08:15
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Senior Member
Group: Members
Posts: 265
Joined: 05-Dec 03
From: Memphis - US
Member No.: 30,424
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yo. wassabi. i think that you have made a very wise choice in the machine, software, and hardware for starting off doing demo of you work. i would recomend getting a firewire drive that runs at 7200 rpm and uses the oscar 911 fireware. my suggestion here is to get a western digital 80gb(about 100 dollars). it has 8mb cache buffer. then get a decent firewire enclosure about 35-40 dollars that has the oscar 911 firmware, or you could just buy a drive. check here for some help on logic: http://www.apple.com/software/pro/logic/quicktour/this will get you up and running. don't mind that it is for the logic pro edition. they work the exact same. pro just has more add-ons. happy recording, editbrain
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Thu 22 Apr 2004, 12:48
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Senior Member
Group: Members
Posts: 235
Joined: 25-Jul 02
From: Strongsville - US
Member No.: 6,217
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It's just an external hard drive that runs via the firewire connection (marked by the triangular shaped symbol with the circle in the middle) - similar to the USB connection you use to hook up your US-122, but it allows for much faster data transfer. The reason to get one is to separte the workload between your emac's CPU - which has to deal with running Logic and other processes, and the firewire drive, which would handle the reading and writing of audio files during playback and recording. Using a second hard drive in this manner is recommended for efficiency, and will become more important as you start using more and more tracks in your songs. You should be fine just starting out using the drive that comes with your emac. I used the internal drive on my imac, which has less power than your emac (700mhz, 384RAM), with no problems for 6 months before I bought a firewire drive. It's not absolutely necessary, just highly recommended, so save for your mic and then worry about the drive later on. And editbrain was referring to the "Oxford" 911 chipset, which is recommended for audio - I'm pretty sure most drives have that or better these days, but it's always best to make sure.
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