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Computer Technology Amazes Me

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URL: http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=3108
Printed Date: February 28 2025 at 22:32
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Topic: Computer Technology Amazes Me
Posted By: Sweetnighter
Subject: Computer Technology Amazes Me
Date Posted: January 18 2005 at 19:06
So I'm setting up my recording studio, slowly but surely, when I soon discover I need another hard drive. Although my computer runs at a decent enough speed to do sound recording and has a good sound card (which i bought not too long ago) I realized I had no space on my hard drive, which stores roughly 14 GB on it, which I figured was pretty small considering its three or so years old. I've simultaneously been reading Home Recording For Musicians For Dummies and it said that most people usually use more than one hard drive and that "as of the writing of this book" a 40 GB hard drive costs $120. So then I check out the store, and I'm like, DAMN BOY! I got a $60 deal on a 160 GB hard drive! I couldn't believe it. I'm not computer idiot, but I just don't buy computer hardware all that often, and I was just amazed by how fast the technology progresses.

Oh yeah, that book was written late 2002.


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I bleed coffee. When I don't drink coffee, my veins run dry, and I shrivel up and die.
"Banco Del Mutuo Soccorso? Is that like the bank of Italian soccer death or something?" -my girlfriend



Replies:
Posted By: Garion81
Date Posted: January 18 2005 at 19:39

 

 

OK think about it.  The minute a computer company or device company releases its "new" product they probably have already started R&D of the next one 6 months prior.  By the time the reviewer or book writer gets it and has time to work with it and publish another 3-4 months have passed or so. So now the company has 10 months research invested and probably in the next 4 months it will be out.  In the meantime the clone companies have already started mass producing the "new" thing released a couple months prior and are flooding the market with their product driving the price down even lower.

It is pretty head spinning.

 



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"What are you going to do when that damn thing rusts?"


Posted By: James Lee
Date Posted: January 18 2005 at 20:24

on my first (windows) PC, I had to record everything in 16-bit, 22khz mono to make sure it would fit on the hard drive. Plus I could make a sandwich while it was writing to disk. 



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http://www.last.fm/user/sollipsist/?chartstyle=kaonashi">


Posted By: Hangedman
Date Posted: January 18 2005 at 23:11
My dad has since the 80's used an atari computer for all of his recording work in his studio(with all sorts of sound boards of course, and some unique programming that he did himself and i dont know how in the world he did it seeing as hes completely computer illeterate) and it works perfectly, its performance is to feeble to even be measured kilobytes i think. But a few years ago he tried to upgrade to a pentium, and after about a month he gave it to me because it "sucked" and he went back to his atari. Basically if it works it doesnt matter if its powerfull enough, it all has to do with how the data is stored.


Posted By: sigod
Date Posted: January 19 2005 at 07:18

It really comes down to what you really need. That often differs to what you want by a large degree. I had no real complaints with my PIII, even though it was fairly primitive by today's standards, I knew it inside out and could work really fast. Getting results is everything. 

I tend to upgrade the computer in my studio every three years. The most recent upgrade was down to a Win 98/XP migration which my PIII couldn't realy handle.

My father however has to be seen to be believed with computers. He actually moves the mouse like a toy car and tries to 'turn courners' with it, when he wants to move the mouse left or right.

Bless him.

 



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I must remind the right honourable gentleman that a monologue is not a decision.
- Clement Atlee, on Winston Churchill



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