• Ernie Ball
  • MusicMan
  • Sterling by MusicMan

What do you use as your primary computer?

  • Mac. - I am the cool kid from the Apple commercial.

    Votes: 43 57.3%
  • PC. - I am the geeky looking guy from the Apple commercial.

    Votes: 26 34.7%
  • Other. - There is an Apple commercial?

    Votes: 6 8.0%

  • Total voters
    75

Psycho Ward

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 28, 2005
Messages
5,053
Location
Elk Creek, VA and Murrells Inlet, SC
I have several of both, and I'm not crazy about computers anymore. I started out on and still use (a couple of times a year) a KayPro II running CP/M. My Synergy II+ GDS (THE most massive additive synth ever built) filter tables only run on the ole KayPro.

My studio is all computers, but I haven't turned them on much at all since I took bass guitar.... that's not to say it's saved me any money though. :D
 

maddog

Well-known member
Joined
May 8, 2004
Messages
4,463
Location
Albuquerque
PC.

There's a reason Microsoft is #1.

ya, Bill Gates banked on people's fault tolerance over cost tolerance.


I used PC's for most of my personal digital life but was never fond of them. I've used Unix boxes for most of my academic/professional life and loved there stability. When I found out Apple had gone to a Unix kernel, it was a no brainer.
 

saxnbass

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 8, 2007
Messages
968
Location
UK
Yeah . . . . unethical business practices, frivilous litigation to obliterate competition, theft, and deceitful marketing . . . . nothing that any sane person would be proud of . . . .

Couldn't have said it better myself. :)
 

phatduckk

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 25, 2004
Messages
8,145
Location
San Mateo, California, United States
PC.

There's a reason Microsoft is #1.

ya there is - go rent the movie "pirates of silicon valley" and youll get a decent representation of how the early years went. its not too flattering for mr gates n crew.

i was a windows guy for years and years and a couple years ago i switched. honestly, i for me there's no reason to use windows anymore... ever. its crap
 
Last edited:

phatduckk

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 25, 2004
Messages
8,145
Location
San Mateo, California, United States
I used PC's for most of my personal digital life but was never fond of them. I've used Unix boxes for most of my academic/professional life and loved there stability. When I found out Apple had gone to a Unix kernel, it was a no brainer.

excatly why and how i switched to mac. the combo of the happy, juicey ui and the fact that i can open up a terminal window and geek out is awesome. i love it.

now that they're running on intel chips is great too. more software.

and honestly the prices are great IMHO. my MacBook was $1350 after i put 2GB of RAM in it. Its a workhorse. every single day for at least 10 hours my macbook's running Apache server, mysql server, safari, mail, forefox, eclipse, a bunch of terminal windows, photoshop, IM client, iTunes and Windows thru Paralles (gotta test stuff on IE). That's a ton of stuff for a little $1350 machine to do at the same time and the lil bastard NEVER fails me.
 

Dr Stankface

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 21, 2005
Messages
5,261
Location
Jacksonville, Florida
PC lover. :D

I'm a Counter-Strike: Source kind of guy. My PC lets me play that, holds my music, keeps my stuff organized.

Sounds like it's doing a good job to me. :)
 

roburado

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 18, 2005
Messages
6,089
Location
Commerce, MI
I used Mac before I used PC. Then, I went PC, because everything around me was PC. I came back to Mac because of the frequency with which I found the infamous blue screen of death. I don't find the spinning beach ball of death nearly as much.
 

fly

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 12, 2004
Messages
1,765
Location
Abby/Beautiful British Columbia
and honestly the prices are great IMHO. my MacBook was $1350 after i put 2GB of RAM in it. Its a workhorse. every single day for at least 10 hours my macbook's running Apache server, mysql server, safari, mail, forefox, eclipse, a bunch of terminal windows, photoshop, IM client, iTunes and Windows thru Paralles (gotta test stuff on IE). That's a ton of stuff for a little $1350 machine to do at the same time and the lil bastard NEVER fails me.



man.........the more i hear about this unit.........the more it makes me think that,this is what to get next.


been on a PC since '02...........not many years under my belt but,been happy with it so far.


and the more we're getting into recording,the more sense it makes to get a Mac.


great topic guys.........thanks for the insight.
 

SteveB

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 3, 2004
Messages
6,192
Location
Pittsburgh, PA
Chuck Ward:

That KayPro II still running, eh? They were nice machines at the time! I still remember some CP/M commands (pip for example). Do you use WordStar on there?
 

Evolver

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 15, 2007
Messages
74
Location
next to the lake
My home, studio and work computers - three of which I built - are PC-based. I'm constantly fighting viruses on the computer my kids use and have plenty of issues with the other ones. I'm not sure Apple is the way to go either and I certainly wouldn't look forward to the learning curve of another recording software (currently using Sonar(r)). It's time for the next generation of computer systems where you don't need to spend hours and hours of maintenance and downloading to keep a system running and so can spend the majority of computer time accomplishing something useful. Systems are obsolete before the bugs are worked out and software/hardware upgrades are typically anything but seamless- great strategy until customers go elsewhere... Whatever... I'm not at all happy with status quo and hope some competition improves things.

BP: Great interview (Cnet)!!! Hope the new systems work well for EB! I also hope this sets an example...
 

prickly_pete

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 16, 2003
Messages
708
ya, Bill Gates banked on people's fault tolerance over cost tolerance.


I used PC's for most of my personal digital life but was never fond of them. I've used Unix boxes for most of my academic/professional life and loved there stability. When I found out Apple had gone to a Unix kernel, it was a no brainer.


FreeBSD kernel to be exact, which technically isn't "Unix," but rather a Unix derivative like Linux. I believe SCO still owns "UNIX."
 
Top Bottom