any reason not to buy one? I've been a cheap-laptop only sort of guy for years, as I don't really use my computer for anything intensive enough to need anything more. Now, however, I use a cheap netbook (MSI Wind), and I have it loaded with Ubuntu, so I need a "real" computer.Other than internet, word processing, and other really basic stuff like that, the big thing I want it for is for audio editing/recording. I want to set up a basic home recording "studio" (well, at least some mics/stands, a keyboard, and DAW software). Also, I've never been into video games, but I have enjoyed playing Call of Duty out here in Afghanistan.The question is, do I go buy an iMac and be done with it? Will it be powerful enough to easily do all that I want to do?Do I buy a PC tower instead, and if so, do I give anything up by getting a 1080p TV for it instead of a true computer monitor (I'd do it just for the sake of size).Should I buy a PS3, or will an iMac 27" be just as good at playing games (I won't play them that much, but I don't want them to run poorly if I do)
9/19/2010 7:35:54 AM
im pretty sure call of duty and other such games don't have a native apple install and you would have to both buy a license of windows but any time to wanted to play you'd have to boot into it. If mac os is something you like, I'd go for a mac mini, a tv, and a ps3. run the mini and ps3 into the tv.
9/19/2010 9:07:18 AM
I've never really understood the appeal of the Mac Mini, as you have as much (or probably more) money tied up in it as you would in the much more capable iMac by the time you buy a display, keyboard, mouse, etc. on the other hand, for my purposes, that might actually be a pretty good set up. i hadn't even thought about that. the PS3 would also give me BluRay capability, so I wouldn't have to buy a standalone player. I would consider dual-booting any Mac I bought to run Windows if I ever needed it. Of course, I can't imagine what I'd need it for if I installed Logic and Mac MS Office. I guess I could always keep my shitty Windows laptop stashed away in the closet for use in a pinch.is there any disadvantage to using an HDTV as a monitor? Any features I need to make sure I get (2x HDMI inputs, etc)?
9/19/2010 10:01:25 AM
pixel density kinda sucks but if the screen is across the room it doesn't really matter. I wouldn't get the newest generation mini. I'd get the last one that was reasonably priced ($499/599). Again, that's only if you're dead set on mac os. if you don't care between windows and osx, get an hp or emachines/gateway and be done on the cheap. saw a 8gb ram, quad core, 1tb hdd box for like $599 the other day
9/19/2010 10:21:41 AM
bump for any further inputs
9/22/2010 8:46:02 PM
I'm going to give you two different takes.First take: If you want a recording "studio" for a hobby, get the $1199 iMac, put Garageband/Logic/whatever your app of choice is on it and have fun.Then get a PS3 for the television.Advantages: Simple experience, Blu-Ray.Disadvantages: More expensive, more $ if you need to use Windows, no connectivity between PS3 and the iMac.Second take: Buy a 400-500 dollar beefy desktop PC on special from an OEM (Studio XPS 8100 available on Dell Outlet right now for ~550 bucks after 20% off coupon)Get a 24" LCD for ~175 bucksThen get an Xbox 360 for the television and a Netflix subscription. I have a big expensive HTPC with a blu-ray player and it's never been used. I stream everything and don't miss the dvd/blu-ray experience at all. Advantages: 1/2 the price, more performance. The 360 is FAR better as a game platform. More games, less bullshit, cheaper. If you ever wanted to use the xbox as your TV set top box, it only requires buying a tuner for the PC (~100 bucks). Disadvantages: No blu-ray support, no OSX option (unless you want to roll your own OSX86 install), lower resale value down the road.I actually just downsized from 4 devices to three. I had a quad core HP desktop, Mac Mini, custom HTPC and xbox360. Just sold the HP desktop, and use the Mac Mini as my daily at-home computer.It definitely wouldn't cut it as a DAW for me, but an iMac probably would. If I had to just go with two total devices, I would ditch the Mac and keep the HTPC and the xbox 360.
9/22/2010 10:08:05 PM
9/25/2010 11:54:30 PM
I don't think he really care about how it runs (at least not enough to appreciate software like you, I, and others would suggest). In all seriousness, the biggest drawback to the Mac Mini is the HD is going to be slower than in a desktop Mac. It's just not quite as nice of a drive stock, and the interface is slower.It would probably work fine in 90% of cases though.And my friend had a mac mini hooked up to his TV full time for usage, with a wireless keyboard, and it worked pretty well. OS X has a lot of neat zooming features that makes it very feasible.You would also get decent gaming performance out of it, especially if you booted into Windows. And OnLive works very well in OS X if you want to give that a spin.Worst case scenario, if you hate the Mac Mini with wireless setup, you could probably sell it for a large percent of what you paid (because Macs have higher resale value than typical PCs), and just jump on the iMac.
9/26/2010 1:37:28 AM
Well, I mean, I like nice stuff, and I'm not technologically retarded or anything. I'm not all wrapped up in benchmarks or anything, though. What am I going to need the processing power or HD speed for, really? 95% of the time, it'll be for surfing the internet, sending emails, looking at pictures, playing music or movies, etc. If I buy a PS3, I don't see why I'll need big power for gaming (hell, I'll probably barely use the PS3, haha). Maybe I would need the additional horsepower for recording with Logic.That said, if the iMac is the better solution, then I'm on it. I don't think that there will be much difference, cost-wise. It's more of an issue of whether I'd prefer a 40"+ TV display, or the greater computer power. I don't really see how there's much difference, otherwise.[Edited on September 26, 2010 at 2:34 PM. Reason : ]
9/26/2010 2:22:18 PM
Let me tell you this from experience. Everyone thinks that using a HDTV as their computer monitor is going to be awesome.It never is. Either you're a normal person and it's 10ft away from your couch, where you have to zoom everything to read the screen, or you have it sitting on the desk in front of you where the heat bakes you day in and day out and the density is so low you can see individual pixels.In either case, its fun for about a month, then the novelty wears off.I own a Mac Mini. The hdd is a slowballs 5400rpm laptop drive. Now you can spring for the twin 7200rpm Mac Mini (for a $1000) that eliminates that problem, but then it's another 150 bucks to get all that inside a big 21.5" monitor with a better video card.
9/26/2010 3:05:19 PM
A PC would work perfectly fine as a DAW... use Reaper, its free until you feel guilty and then it costs $60 to feel warm and fuzzy. Its getting very popular and is quite powerful.You don't NEED a mac for anything.(And i do a LOT of audio/music work on my Mac using Logic and Ableton)
9/27/2010 8:35:04 AM
Well, I'm not strictly interested in a Mac for audio production. I kinda just want one as my everyday computer...but the only thing I'd likely do that needs any more capability than I have in my netbook would be using it as a DAW.
9/27/2010 10:52:54 AM
10/5/2010 11:59:03 PM
10/10/2010 4:07:56 PM
...waiting on the 2011 iMac refresh...
2/9/2011 6:44:50 PM
^^Which of those three statements isn't true?
2/9/2011 9:46:39 PM
what's the less bullshit part mean? psn is free. you have to pay for even basic access to xbox live right? is there something else i'm missing?
2/10/2011 12:41:48 PM
any game worth playing on the 360 has a superior port on PC.
2/10/2011 1:11:46 PM
2/10/2011 4:09:16 PM
2/10/2011 4:56:54 PM
2/10/2011 7:09:00 PM
if you are really serious about audio processing, recording and encoding, PC is going to give you the best options in terms of power, flexibility and generally a better value. You can get away with an imac, but honestly you are either going to get a nice expensive mac pro tower or a decent powerhouse computer for 1/2. Since you really don't need heavy graphics power (although CUDA and Open CL could open up a number crunching to apps to use GPU processing which is around 30-35 times more capable than a regular cpu).I'm no audio expert, but you really won't spend your money on the PC itself, but the actual audio processors that would hook up to the PC. I forgot which sound card add-on card was the semi-pro choice, but it was like 400-600 for it; then add the mixers, keyboard and other audio crap that can pile up. Only if you aren't that serious though, most people can get by with a decent mic and simple audacity.Personally if I was semi-serious with audio, I would just get a simple pc box with a cheap/decent gpu (like 1k for the pc), a few monitors and a decent mic. Then attempt to soundproof the room a bit with acoustic dampeners.
2/10/2011 7:18:44 PM
Audio interfaces will work with PC or Mac. The main difference is the software, if you are debating between mac and pc, decide on the software you want to use and move from there.
2/10/2011 7:25:40 PM
2/10/2011 9:46:10 PM