Seperate Hard Drive For Music Apps., Does it matter? |
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Tue 30 Jul 2002, 03:12
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Newbie
Group: Members
Posts: 23
Joined: 28-May 02
From: Worcester - US
Member No.: 4,846
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I've heard it's good to make a seperate hard drive or use a divider or something for all your music apps. because it frees up memory and makes your computer go faster. wheeee! How do you do this? I'm pretty new to mac's and maybe a little ignorant about computers in general. Thanks in advance.
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Hey Ringo------Have a banana!
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Tue 30 Jul 2002, 03:56
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Moderator
Group: Team
Posts: 508
Joined: 09-Jul 02
From: Sydney - AU
Member No.: 5,658
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Having a separate drive for your audio files from your applications is a good idea. It won't really make your computer go faster however it will increase your track count slightly and will make your system/application drive less fragmented. For the separate drive you will obviously need to buy one. What sort of mac do you have? You can buy a firewire or IDE or SCSI. If you have newer mac the first 2 are preferable. If you have an iBook or tibook the firewire option is the one for you. If you only have one drive and want to partition it you will need to re-format your drive. i.e. if you do this you will lose all data that you have on your drive so you should back everything up first. Once formatted and partitioned you will need to reinstall the System Software and all your programs. If you can be bothered to do this here are the details. 1. Back-up everything. 2 Start up computer from System Disk (hold down the 'C' key while you start up the computer). 3. Run the program "Drive Setup" from your System Disk. 4. Click 'Initialize' then click 'custom setup' 5. You now have the choice to set the number of partitions and their sizes.
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Wed 31 Jul 2002, 02:04
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Advanced Member
Group: Members
Posts: 393
Joined: 11-Jun 02
From: London - UK
Member No.: 5,044
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hey rickenbacker, i love your input in these forums, find you to be a very valuable member of this community. but... i don't understand this recommendation. i find firewire too slow (well, only a bit), for audio. my firewire drive has the latest firewire to ide bus, surely, the best idea is to have your sequencer on a different drive to your audio, and both of these should be non-firewire drives. also, 450 quid for an 80gb drive??? that's a hell of a price... anyhow, peace, later.
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one for all and all for one...
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Wed 31 Jul 2002, 03:09
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Moderator In Chief (MIC)
Group: Editors
Posts: 15,189
Joined: 23-Dec 01
From: Paris - FR
Member No.: 2,758
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Rickenbacker, you should really read a test in SOS this month upon Firewire drives It happens that the glyph is the best of the test, yes. But the LaCie is strangely similar… see… (there's something under that…) I still haven't had time to read all (especially the noise issue, if you can -hear- a drive noise near the new macs but the numbers are clear on the work part of the problem. If someone had a better controler for firewire, we'll now it already. btw, do you think 450£ is expensive for an enclosure looking like you HD system, or you Mbox… (noise issue asside, can't comment on this) You can buy 240Gb drives for half that price now… Wake up like Laurent Garnier would say
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Wed 31 Jul 2002, 14:15
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Maniac Member
Group: Members
Posts: 645
Joined: 17-May 02
From: Broughton
Member No.: 4,705
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I'll have to read this SOS FireWire report, as I'd like to know all the options available and see the test results etc. I don't know much about other FireWire drives, but I had a Glyph Companion on loan for a couple of weeks and loved it. I'd like to buy one permanently but they're so bloody expensive and I'm in the middle of buying a house. As for the size, I think 80GB is enough storage space for me - that's more than enough for all the multitrack files for a couple of albums at least. After that point, I'd be backing them up to CD-R or whatever anyway because all drives can potentially fail, however big or expensive they are. I know the Companion seems expensive, but believe me the build quality is excellent - it's the Rolls Royce of hard drives! It uses a special composite metal (used by only one other company in the world!) for optimum cooling properties - the fan only came on once when I used it, so it's also incredibly quiet. It's fast, full duplex, 7200 rpm spindle rate, uses the 911 chipset, blah blah blah. Anyhow, this isn't a Glyph product placement - I just know that it's a really, really good choice for a FireWire drive. And I think a separate FireWire drive has to be the best option for audio at the moment - used just for storing the files. Have your sequencer app on the computer's hard drive and flow your audio back and forth to your external FireWire drive. Well, that's what I do and it works for me!
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