Producing Netbooks |
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Producing Netbooks |
6 May 2009, 07:59
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Reality Bites Rec (GER) Ocean Drive Rec (US) Receptive Rec (UK) Gruppe: tb-Support Beiträge: 6.126 Mitglied seit: 2-January 03 Wohnort: Wels, Oberösterreich Mitglieds-Nr.: 647 |
auch in dem Berreich tut sich immer mehr, aktuell bietet auch Amazon ein ProducingNetbook an http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0028LPGV...ASIN=B0028LPGVW
ZITAT (IMG:http://createdigitalmusic.com/images/2009/05/indamixx-model2.jpg)
Laptops for music are nothing new. But better versions of Linux make no-hassle music production easier and more powerful – and new netbooks make it cheap and ultra-portable, too, for times when even that 15" laptop feels clunky. Netbooks aren't for everyone, and I imagine some people will miss Windows and Mac OS, even with better compatibility and powerful features on Linux. But if you are looking for an additional, more mobile machine, the combination is definitely worth a look. A significant revision to the one netbook customized for Linux music has just become available today – you read about it here first. The elements of Linux-based music making have reached a nice convergence with the release of Ubuntu 9.04 – the combination of a polished, mature Linux distribution with a newly-updated real-time kernel for low-latency audio is looking especially potent. At the same time, the increasingly-popular netbook has also improved in the latest generation. Ronald Stewart of Indamixx, a custom Linux mobile computer builder and OS packager, writes to brag about his latest generation. And he's even found a way to do mobile music in his vehicle. (Let's hope traffic in the LA area isn't so bad that you're actually adjusting beats in a tracker on the road, however.) Indamixx has three products here, one software and two hardware:
It also ships with the commercial app energyXT. I think it'd worth buying a copy of the superb, modern tracker Renoise, which has excellent Linux support. Renoise also got a significant update, now in beta, which I'll talk about by next week. Ardour 3.0 is expected to be a major update, as well, with support for MIDI and VSTs – that could be a game-changer when it happens, so stay tuned. The laptop is what especially intrigues me. Linux is great, but it is nice having a configuration that's static, because it helps navigate around potential compatibility issues with specific hardware specs. (That's a problem we see regularly on Windows, too, and even occasionally – as with a specific wifi bug on an early build of Leopard – on the Mac.) Indamixx has a special version of the MSI Wind that comes pre-optimized for Indamixx. Ronald describes the newly-updated Indamixx Laptop specs. (We saw the laptop here on CDM first in November, but this is a significant upgrade from that model):
Indamixx also throws in a carrying case and free FedEx shipping. I'll be installing Ubuntu 9.04 on my main PC laptop soon, and possibly also my MacBook. Stay tuned for more on the latest Linux OS and what you can do with it for creative music making. More info: http://www.indamixx.com/ Indamixx Laptop @ Amazon: Indamixx Portable Studio Netbook Edition Model 2 quelle: http://createdigitalmusic.com/2009/05/05/t...cker/#more-5818 Der Beitrag wurde von Derrick S bearbeitet: 6 May 2009, 08:03 |
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6 May 2009, 08:53
Beitrag
#2
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Reality Bites Rec (GER) Ocean Drive Rec (US) Receptive Rec (UK) Gruppe: tb-Support Beiträge: 6.126 Mitglied seit: 2-January 03 Wohnort: Wels, Oberösterreich Mitglieds-Nr.: 647 |
dazu auch interressant:
ZITAT Lenovo S10 Netbook Does Ableton – and Developers, Go Grab a Netbook Tim Hanlon of gizmag.com recently got an IdeaPad S10 – Lenovo's lovely, $400 "netbook" – to test. He didn't just do the usual benchmarks, though. His review also included the unlikely choice of Ableton Live and, thanks to a free ExpressCard slot, a MOTU Traveler FireWire interface. The inclusion of an ExpressCard/34 slot opens the IdeaPad up to a range of high-bandwidth applications. The most relevant for me as a musician was the possibility of using one on stage alongside a professional audio interface. Taking your expensive (and for some, irreplaceable) main rig out on tour and having to constantly keep an eye out for people putting their beer down on the stage next to it is a stressful affair, and the thought of using a relatively cheap, incredibly portable, and ultimately replaceable machine instead was always incredibly attractive - and I'm very glad to say, now possible.Check out the full story on Gizmag: Lenovo's IdeaPad S10 Reviewed One major catch, before you get too excited: Tim has the same problem I have universally with these ExpressCards. They just stick our awkwardly. They're even worse on the full-sized slots on bigger laptops. Chancing an audio interface popping out while playing pretty much kill the appeal for me, especially when there are plenty of workable USB2 audio interfaces out there (including from MOTU). MacBook, you're not off the hook yet, because this just means I want more USB slots, but I digress. The bigger message here to me: software developers ought to pick up a couple of these machines and think about what will run on them. With zillions of these netbooks now shipping, why not? They're not going to replace even standard laptops, but it's an opportunity to sell more software by targeting these boxes, or even testing lighter-weight software on them. (Imagine notation or quick drum machines.) I don't really miss the days when we ran Ableton Live on 400MHz G3s, but, well, we did. And Tim has a point: next time you're playing a frightening club with chicken wire and angry drunks, here's your machine! Actually, that S10 is cute. Maybe just bring a tarp and some tazers. http://createdigitalmusic.com/2008/11/26/l...ould-take-note/ also für ableton sollts dann denke ich schon min. ne extra soundcard sein zwecks latenz Der Beitrag wurde von Derrick S bearbeitet: 6 May 2009, 08:56 |
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