Skip to main content
Description
An acronym for Digital Audio Workstation A digital audio workstation (DAW) is an electronic device or application software used for recording, editing and producing audio files. DAWs come in a wide variety of configurations from a single software program on a laptop, to an integrated stand-alone unit, all the way to a highly complex configuration of numerous components controlled by a central computer. Regardless of configuration, modern DAWs have a central interface that allows the user to alter and mix multiple recordings and tracks into a final produced piece.

A good daw

I'm new to this home recording set. I have built a DAW using a AMD1.33 266 cpu,asus a7m266 motherboard,256MB ddr ram,win 2k,30GIG system hd,18gig scsi 80pin HD for apps,9gig 10k rpm and a 60gig ide ata100 7200rpm for audio tracks,10/100 nic,dual head ati video card and a Maudio omni studio with a delta 66. Should I stay with this or get a mac G4 350 thats available to me? :roll:

DAW: multitrack w/ foldbacks?

Greeetings! In a nut shell, I'm putting together a DAW (who isn't?) and my question concerns signal flow and system config. I want to be able to track up to 16 tracks live and avail of myself the ability to foldback monitor sends to the studio (ideally 6, 4 min.). I realize I will probably need two A/Ds to get the 16 tracks (or maybe an Apogee A/D 16 and an D/A 16?).

Next DAW

Hello,

I'm just about ready to upgrade to a second, more current DAW. Any thoughts on dual processor vs a single 1.7 or higher CPU ? DDR Ram ? Any particular motherboards hot @ the moment?

I will be building a Nuendo system (which specifically mentions dual processor) and want to run VST insts. and plugs as smoothly as possible.