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I'm a mobile type man myself...i appreciate the benefits of being able to afford a way in which i can master and mix on the move. Okay, so what's the best laptop out there that'll alow me to do this? Sony Vaio? And what extra hardware would i need to midi my equipment and mic?
Yall are so much help!

Comments

Opus2000 Mon, 11/05/2001 - 17:11

Sony Vaio laptops are great...what do you need for extra hardware? Hmmm...well, that really depends on what you plan on recording and mixing and what other gear you have with the portable setup..do you bring a small mixer with you? outboard gear?
There are soooo many laptops out there...which one will work for you is really dependant on what you want to do with it..you will need an external hard drive if you plan on doing mulit-recording..external SCSI or Firewire will work just fine...Just stay away from Compaq or HP laptops..
There are numerous audio devices for laptops nowadays...MOTU 828(Firewire)..RME PCMCIA..Echo PCMCIA..Crest Firewire(In conjunction with Digital Harmony)..
Also are you using MIDI? to give you the best answer we need as much information as possible to help you out. Let me know and I'll answer your questions as best as possible..
Opus

anonymous Sat, 11/17/2001 - 09:50

I also have a laptop its a Dell Latitude, 256 mg ram, 13 gig hard drive, CD writer, Pentium 650 Processor.......
I personally like something that is portable but study.... I recently did a project on a Sony (small thing)... and it was too pokey.... I like something I can throw around and its study to hell...... If you do go down the laptop route you need to get a tascam USB 428.... Type it in your search engine and check it out.... I would not be without it.... LOW LATENCY, FADERS etc etc..... Not a glitch !!!

Heidi xxxxxxxx

Adrenaline Sun, 11/18/2001 - 13:09

I've got an MPC which is the center of my entire studio which only consists of that mpc, a roland mc-307, and an late roland sound rack. I'm aware that laptops come with limited ins and outs so i need to know what type of hardware would allow me to setup such equipment say anywhere. I imagine i would need something with alot of gigs. Portable Mixer? I'm interested in purchasing the Roland VS-2480. I like the way that feels..if you call that portable. Bear with me i'm young! :)
Tnax

anonymous Wed, 11/21/2001 - 13:09

Originally posted by Comusic:
I personally like something that is portable but study....

I would suggest if you are really looking for something study / rugged, check out Panasonics line of Laptops. My local police station is in the process of outfitting all cars with them. This may or may not be what you are looking for. But if you might possibly drop it say from 20ft. there is a great chance that anything else won't be left operational.

Opus2000 Thu, 11/29/2001 - 17:52

Originally posted by recordista:
Might also look into the USBpre from Sound Devices.

I just tried this unit out....IT SUCKS!!!!!! Sorry to be so blatently rude about it...but IT SUCKS!!!! :p
All it really supports is Direct X ...no ASIO..first mistake...next..it takes power from USB hub...second mistake..it has way too much on the box for Windows and Mac too handle..lame lame lame lame...latency is unbearable! Buddy of mine tried it on Pro Tools free and he said he sounded like Elvis with the delay going on!!! DONT GET THIS UNIT!!!!!
Opus

anonymous Tue, 01/22/2002 - 20:03

Another warning on Sony is that its iLink is porblematic with Motu 828. Not 1st hand experience but I've seen posts on rec.audio.pro and alt.music/4-track.

Also in reply to the compaq basher. The RME website has a lot of specifc notebook info and several Compaq models score high marks. Also for those considering firewire, the Compaq machines use TI chipsets which appear to have less problems than whatever Sony uses.

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