Mbox Vs. The Rest Of The Usb World, guidance for powerbook recording set up |
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Mon 15 Dec 2003, 05:42
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Newbie
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Posts: 6
Joined: 01-Dec 03
From: Virginia - US
Member No.: 30,055
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I have a g4 powerbook 867 Mhz, 384 mb RAM, running 10.2.8. After some investigation, I've narrowed my choices down to two, for money, quality and reliability: getting an M-Audio Duo and Logic Audio Big Box or getting the Digidesign M-box. (roughly $500 for either) I'm wondering if there's any major differences between the two set-ups (hardware or software advantages, etc.) and also if anyone has any recommendations or warnings for me on my set up in general.
I'll be doing some recording with a mixer probably or just using the 2 inputs for mics, etc. I recognize the limitations of USB but I need good software more than inputs/outputs right now. Maybe I'll upgrade to FireWire sometime. Thanks for your advice!
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Thu 18 Dec 2003, 09:36
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Newbie
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Posts: 6
Joined: 01-Dec 03
From: Virginia - US
Member No.: 30,055
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Thanks. yeah I've been reading up on it. I just noticed that the Mbox's sample rate is only 44.1, 48 kHz. but the Duo offers up to 96 kHz. What does this difference mean in practical terms? (not how does it work but how important is it)
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Thu 18 Dec 2003, 21:23
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Maniac Member
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From: Entre-Deux-Mers - FR
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Decide on what you want to plug into your computer - how many mics, guitars, keyboards...? If you want to input midi information, the mbox won't do it! If you want good mics using 48V phantom power, a pair'll cost more than the mbox/PTLE. Consider the app you want to use for making music, and for making the interface work. You get PTLE free with the mbox. How are you going to listen to what you're making? I suggest a good pair of headphones. You can use your hifi amp & speakers for output, and only good monitors when you really can't resist paying out for them. Cables need to be included in your costing. If you're getting a new computer too and need to record with mics, consider the noise the computer makes (fans, CD, HD). Portables are the quietest. I suggest finding an extra source of income too - heeh hee
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Fri 19 Dec 2003, 12:42
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Maniac Member
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From: Broughton
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A popular rule of thumb is that it's better to increase the bit-depth of audio files rather than increase the sampling rate. In other words, working at 24-bit and 44.1KHz is good enough for most humans (really, only bats and high-end mastering engineers might be picky about your track's sonic definition above this) and is an acceptable compromise between sound quality and hard disk space. Plus everyone listens to the finished CD at 16-bit, 44/1KHz, anyway.
It is perfectly true, though, that the quality of your sound cannot be higher than the weakest link in your signal chain. You have a $1,000 acoustic guitar, but you record it using a $150 mic. Disappointed with the results, you will be.
As for the FireWire 410, there does seem to be quite a crowd of disgruntled users out there already. The reality doesn't seem to match the expectation, basically.
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Mon 22 Dec 2003, 16:15
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Newbie
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Joined: 10-Oct 03
From: Chicago - US
Member No.: 26,452
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If you are recording songs with the intention of burning them on cd is there any benifit to recording 24bit, rather than at 16 if it's going to end up at 16 anyway?
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Sat 3 Jan 2004, 19:28
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Newbie
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From: Burr Ridge - US
Member No.: 30,691
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M-Audio OmniStudio USB. There really isn't any lag time, at least not that I have experienced yet, and it is a great piece of equipment. I plug the Soundcraft M8 into it and then turn around and use SoundStudio, clean it up using SoundSoap, then import it to Cubase SL.
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