It was a shitty time in my life, but using Live gave me hope for the future.
I used to go into the DJ section at Guitar Center to amuse myself. At the time the whole DJ thing was very alien to me. I would play with the mixers and goof off with effects and sampling. It wasn't until I left that job that I realized how badly I missed playing with DJ gear. I missed the equipment soo much that I ended up buying two used 1200s off of Craigslist, and a Rane TTM 57 SL mixer (with Serato Scratch built-in) last year.
So, I've been DJing for a year now. It's sooooo fun. I love it. I still suck really really badly, but someday I might actually be good. I don't care! It's just fun and it's helping me write songs.
When you DJ with a traditional set-up (sorry but laptop-only djing just isn't the same), you are forced to pay very close attention to the inner details of the songs you are playing. You have to listen to it more closely to beat match. After a while you start to really know the material on an intimate level. Even though you're constantly taking in new music, new records and MP3s, you get to learn the music very quickly. You develop a relationship with it. It's weird!
I'm in the process of starting a band again. I've written new songs that kind of sound like Okkervil River, and I think it's the best material I've ever written. I'm looking for the right drummer (a creative one who has a laptop and triggers all kinds of craziness with a certain progam whose name sounds like Love) and I'm going for it. That's why I've started posting with my Hidden Driveways login here on the forum (I'm Sales Dude McBoob). I'm back on. The soup is on!
I'm not looking to hurt the feelings of laptop DJs. I do it sometimes with Live and it's really fun. It's live remixing to me. DJing the traditonal way is just so much harder, and so physical, and sooooo deeply intwined with the music. That's all. Your experience with laptop DJing may be totally different than mine. I'm not saying my method is better than yours. ::peace symbol::