iMac or Macbook
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Amberience
- Posts: 967
- Joined: Tue Sep 23, 2003 2:09 am
- Location: London, UK
iMac or Macbook
Hi all! I'm a student studying music, just about to graduate this year, so I figured I'd take advantage of my student status whilst I still can.
I'm looking at the following:
iMac 17inch 1.83ghz 1GB RAM
160gb HDD 7200rpm
I can get this for £700.30 including the apple care extended warranty.
Macbook 13inch 1.83ghz 1GB RAM
80gb HDD 5400rpm
I estimate I can get this for £760-£780 including the apple care extended warranty.
--
Now. My questions are these:
Would hooking up a USB2.0 HDD spinning at 7200rpm to the Macbook, be as good as the internal HDD on the iMac in terms of track count and read speed?
Are there massive performance differences between the Macbook and iMac? They're the same CPU, same RAM, same combo drive. The only major difference is the hard drive.
I want this setup to record my band and to do an upcoming gig with. There could be more gigs in the future though too.
So it needs to be portable. The iMac is portable for the band, because my guitarist drives. But it isn't portable for the upcoming gig, because it is a long way away and I would have to struggle with a 2U rack size firewire interface also.
Am I going to suffer if I get the Macbook over the iMac?
1. I cannot afford the Macbook Pro.
2. I cannot afford 2 GB of ram.
3. I cannot afford a bigger internal hard disk, nor do I see the point - they all spin at 5400.
4. I could just about squeeze for an external hard disk, but I only see the point of doing that if it is acceptable in terms of track count. I want to record 8 tracks simultaneously.
5. I'm not worried about graphics or anything - this is a purchase that is only for music production.
My current AMD setup can record 8 tracks simutaneously easy. And it can playback at least 30 tracks with a compressor on each track.
This would be a brand new purchase, so I know that it would perform well in a lot of areas, but I want your opinions. This would be my first mac purchase, so I'm being careful. I don't want to get burnt.
I'm looking at the following:
iMac 17inch 1.83ghz 1GB RAM
160gb HDD 7200rpm
I can get this for £700.30 including the apple care extended warranty.
Macbook 13inch 1.83ghz 1GB RAM
80gb HDD 5400rpm
I estimate I can get this for £760-£780 including the apple care extended warranty.
--
Now. My questions are these:
Would hooking up a USB2.0 HDD spinning at 7200rpm to the Macbook, be as good as the internal HDD on the iMac in terms of track count and read speed?
Are there massive performance differences between the Macbook and iMac? They're the same CPU, same RAM, same combo drive. The only major difference is the hard drive.
I want this setup to record my band and to do an upcoming gig with. There could be more gigs in the future though too.
So it needs to be portable. The iMac is portable for the band, because my guitarist drives. But it isn't portable for the upcoming gig, because it is a long way away and I would have to struggle with a 2U rack size firewire interface also.
Am I going to suffer if I get the Macbook over the iMac?
1. I cannot afford the Macbook Pro.
2. I cannot afford 2 GB of ram.
3. I cannot afford a bigger internal hard disk, nor do I see the point - they all spin at 5400.
4. I could just about squeeze for an external hard disk, but I only see the point of doing that if it is acceptable in terms of track count. I want to record 8 tracks simultaneously.
5. I'm not worried about graphics or anything - this is a purchase that is only for music production.
My current AMD setup can record 8 tracks simutaneously easy. And it can playback at least 30 tracks with a compressor on each track.
This would be a brand new purchase, so I know that it would perform well in a lot of areas, but I want your opinions. This would be my first mac purchase, so I'm being careful. I don't want to get burnt.
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rbmonosylabik
- Posts: 2659
- Joined: Thu Mar 09, 2006 7:27 am
If I had to do it all over again (and maybe I will have to in the near future, time to upgrade my computer is drawing near) and had to choose between those two, I'd go with the Macbook. Lugging around an iMac is no fun at all, specially if you don't have a proper small but resistant case for it.
I'm using a USB 2.0 external HD (laCie) for all my audio stuff (projects, samples, etc), and Live on my iMac seems to choke on audio way less often than when I was using it just with the internal HD partitioned.
The ideal thing would be for you to bring your gear along to test the computer before buying. Do some mean stuff to it and see if it can deal with it with the stock RAM. Also, getting third party RAM is cheaper than getting the Apple RAM.
Hope this helps.
I'm using a USB 2.0 external HD (laCie) for all my audio stuff (projects, samples, etc), and Live on my iMac seems to choke on audio way less often than when I was using it just with the internal HD partitioned.
The ideal thing would be for you to bring your gear along to test the computer before buying. Do some mean stuff to it and see if it can deal with it with the stock RAM. Also, getting third party RAM is cheaper than getting the Apple RAM.
Hope this helps.
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Amberience
- Posts: 967
- Joined: Tue Sep 23, 2003 2:09 am
- Location: London, UK
Hmmm.. that would then mean that I would have to buy an external hard disk drive first. Would Apple mind me plugging in and messing around in store???rbmonosylabik wrote:If I had to do it all over again (and maybe I will have to in the near future, time to upgrade my computer is drawing near) and had to choose between those two, I'd go with the Macbook. Lugging around an iMac is no fun at all, specially if you don't have a proper small but resistant case for it.
I'm using a USB 2.0 external HD (laCie) for all my audio stuff (projects, samples, etc), and Live on my iMac seems to choke on audio way less often than when I was using it just with the internal HD partitioned.
The ideal thing would be for you to bring your gear along to test the computer before buying. Do some mean stuff to it and see if it can deal with it with the stock RAM. Also, getting third party RAM is cheaper than getting the Apple RAM.
Hope this helps.
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hacktheplanet
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- Location: Chicago, IL
- Contact:
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airconteka
- Posts: 8
- Joined: Tue Apr 13, 2004 3:09 am
I was faced with the same decision and I am glad I went the macbook route. You can get 7200 internal drives for it , mind you I opted for an external firewire drive and the 2 gig of ram is very affordable (about $us150). The portability is worth it however the screen size sucks so you might need to factor in a monitor as well.
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Amberience
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- Location: London, UK
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airconteka
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Amberience
- Posts: 967
- Joined: Tue Sep 23, 2003 2:09 am
- Location: London, UK
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Amberience
- Posts: 967
- Joined: Tue Sep 23, 2003 2:09 am
- Location: London, UK
So the Macbook price:

The guy also said apart from the HDD difference, the graphic processor on the iMac is a little better than the Macbook, but because its just for audio, it's not that much of a problem..
Looks like what I'm going to do then is get the Macbook, and an external 7200rpm USB2 hdd.

The guy also said apart from the HDD difference, the graphic processor on the iMac is a little better than the Macbook, but because its just for audio, it's not that much of a problem..
Looks like what I'm going to do then is get the Macbook, and an external 7200rpm USB2 hdd.
Last edited by Amberience on Wed May 02, 2007 11:25 am, edited 1 time in total.
I'm gonna play devil's advocate here, and say the iMac. Purely because of the amount of punishment I've put through, and it takes up a lot less space when you're playing out too. I've got a photo of my setup on my Myspace if you fancy a butchers.
'Fear makes the wolf look bigger'
http://www.myspace.com/StevieVega
4Tunes: Quad Intel 2.66, Live 8, Lots of VSTs
4Mixing: Macbook Pro, Live 8, APC40, iPad
http://www.myspace.com/StevieVega
4Tunes: Quad Intel 2.66, Live 8, Lots of VSTs
4Mixing: Macbook Pro, Live 8, APC40, iPad
+1 for iMac
its my philosophy that you know if a laptop is the right choice. If you're unsure, you dont need one. imo.
much more bang-for-the-buck with an iMac, and a 17incher would be plenty portable for those times you need it to be.
http://www.ilugger.com/
its my philosophy that you know if a laptop is the right choice. If you're unsure, you dont need one. imo.
much more bang-for-the-buck with an iMac, and a 17incher would be plenty portable for those times you need it to be.
http://www.ilugger.com/
spreader of butter
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RhythmSickness
- Posts: 345
- Joined: Tue Feb 27, 2007 9:02 am
- Location: uk
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Amberience
- Posts: 967
- Joined: Tue Sep 23, 2003 2:09 am
- Location: London, UK
£50 for the case, £50 for shipping. No f**king way I'm paying that.b0unce wrote:+1 for iMac
its my philosophy that you know if a laptop is the right choice. If you're unsure, you dont need one. imo.
much more bang-for-the-buck with an iMac, and a 17incher would be plenty portable for those times you need it to be.
http://www.ilugger.com/
My soundcard is firewire, so I'm only left with USB2.0 for audio. And USB2.0 is fast enough surely. Does anyone agree that I'm going to bottleneck my system??
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RhythmSickness
- Posts: 345
- Joined: Tue Feb 27, 2007 9:02 am
- Location: uk


barefeats.com wrote: 1. USB 2.0 is much slower than FireWire 400 and 800. Apple states that the USB 2.0 ports on their Macs support transfer rates up to 480 megaBITS per second (Mbps), which translates to 60 megaBYTES per second (MB/s). The most we saw was 144 megaBITS per second or 18 megaBYTES per second.
Think about it. FireWire 400 is rated at 400 megaBITS per second (50 megaBYTES per second) -- 80 megaBITS slower rating than USB 2.0 -- yet when exact same drive/enclosure is plugged into the FireWire 400 port, it goes almost twice as fast!
You can't blame it on the drive, because, as you can see from the FireWire 800 tests, the drive is capable of transfer rates much higher. Some blame it on Apple's USB 2.0 drivers or the USB 2.0 bridge chips. I can't comment on that.

