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Re: Virtuavia - which chassis? [message #105377 is a reply to message #105372] |
Tue, 29 June 2010 21:23 |
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Quote: | The big question - Can you still build a Paris-worthy PC?
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Yes, and not just Paris-worthy - powerful enough that any other DAW like Reaper is going to fly on it, and (given an ADAT sync compatible audio interface) you'll be able to run them in sync alongside PARIS.
$1000 is a generous budget, too - mine cost $400 two years ago and for plug-in and track count it runs circles around my dual G5 2.0ghz.
"... being bitter is like swallowing poison and waiting for the other guy to die..." - anon
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Re: Virtuavia - which chassis? [message #105381 is a reply to message #105378] |
Wed, 30 June 2010 16:06 |
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ganttmann1 wrote on Wed, 30 June 2010 07:27 | Hey Kerry - How's life? Much has happened around here in the last year! We'll have to catch up sometime...
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Love to! I'll try to drop you an email in my dinner break.
Quote: | My big concern about switching platforms has been the dozens and dozens (maybe almost hundreds!) of projects I have on Mac formatted drives. I can't work off of them w/ a PC, can I?
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PARIS has always been pretty much fully cross-platform in that sense, so if you install a utility like MacDrive or similar on your PC, your Mac drives should just show up and you'll be able to copy them over and open them directly in the PC version of PARIS. You'll have complaints about any missing VST plugins you used, of course, there's really no avoiding that. But on the plus side there are so many cool plugins on the PC side it's not even funny - you'll find equivalents of everything you have on Mac, and most likely improvements on them. Some of the freeware stuff out there is *really* good too.
Copying is probably a much better idea than trying to play them back directly off the Mac formatted drive though, it just diminishes the amount of complexity in the situation. I'd recommend you get one or two large and fast extra drives and copy your back catalog onto them - in other words retain the older original drives untouched as archives rather than working from them directly. $100 buys you terabyte drives nowadays - that'll store over ten Maxtor 80 gig drives worth of archived projects, or 200 DVDs, or well over a thousand data CDs worth of backups. Today's computers have really brought PARIS into its own.
As a side note - back "in the day", copying PAFs from one drive to another (thus "de-interleaving" their intentionally interleaved format) meant that the copied files would play back somewhat less efficiently than the originals; the performance "hit" could be noticeable. But the power of today's computers makes that consideration now completely irrelevant.
- Kerry
"... being bitter is like swallowing poison and waiting for the other guy to die..." - anon
[Updated on: Wed, 30 June 2010 16:17] Report message to a moderator
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Re: Virtuavia - which chassis? [message #105383 is a reply to message #105382] |
Wed, 30 June 2010 17:36 |
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No, I built the first one myself and the PCI slots died during the move-in. So I just got on Craigslist and found something that spec'd out the way I wanted it - Mike's drivers have made PARIS much less of a picky-britches about which mobo/bios/flavor of RAM/physical orientation vis magnetic north/obscure voodoo rituals it likes.
"... being bitter is like swallowing poison and waiting for the other guy to die..." - anon
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Re: Virtuavia - which chassis? [message #105392 is a reply to message #105386] |
Fri, 02 July 2010 10:35 |
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Ooooh, I like that Craigslist one - that'll kill as an upgrade from the Macs! $300? Are you kidding me? Perfect! Just check to be sure it has enough old-style PCI slots first, that's the only ones the EDS card will fit in. Of course, that's moot if you get a VirtuaVia chassis. And if you're going multicard, make sure it has a good solid power supply with lots of jam as well - PARIS will work very poorly when underpowered, if at all. I'd say 400 minimum, preferably 500 or over, and a good reputable name brand (post his response here, someone will probably know).
[here's another one you might want to ask about mobo and PSU]
Dunno about the max number of old-school PCI slots, I know there were ones with 6 and I suspect there might be ones with 8 but I really can't say for sure. But I'd reckon you'd be better going with a Virtuavia or Magma chassis rather than getting yourself into a situation where you have lots of slots but not enough IRQs to make PARIS run well on them.
It's the way of the future anyway - no sense in buying an older mobo from a greatly-limited selection just to have enough obsolete PCI slots, when a chassis makes that moot anyway.
"... being bitter is like swallowing poison and waiting for the other guy to die..." - anon
[Updated on: Fri, 02 July 2010 11:19] Report message to a moderator
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