On Tue, Sep 17, 2019 at 03:14:51PM -0400, Karen Lewellen via talk wrote: > It does indeed. > One tends to have extra tools, control surfaces, audio interfaces etc. > etc. that are connected to the computer, running at the same time. Add the > need for fan and machine silence, multiple real and virtual drives and the > entire > construction can be quite layered. One also invests for the long term. He > last updated his studio in 2007.
Sounds very neat. I have certainly built machines for a number of friends and relatives over the years, and think it is great fun. Doesn't happen much anymore given most people are using laptops these days. I think my newest machine of my own is 6 years old at this point (I am sure someone will make a comment about it having been overkill at the time being the reason for that). Too bad I don't know much at all about audio editing equipment (although it looks neat), and my wife would likely think I have plenty of other things that I need to get done. I could give some suggestions for components to pick though if that would be any help. I did build a machine for a friend about 3 years ago that requested quiet. Pretty sure we succeeded. I have to double check visually that it was turned on when I fired it up the first time because I heard nothing, even though it had a couple of fans and spinning hard disks in it. A quality case and water cooling can apparently pull that off. -- Len Sorensen --- Post to this mailing list [email protected] Unsubscribe from this mailing list https://gtalug.org/mailman/listinfo/talk
