Why do producers use macs
However, there are only a few specialized Windows laptops available for music production. Most people on the go usually choose Apple Macbook Pro, and there is definitely a good reason. Apple has always had its base in the creative industries, including music production. Apple computers are well known for their stability, ease of use, and good performance.
Today you have a wide choice of Apple models. The Mac Pro is the most used in a professional studio environment. For home studio applications, an iMac or MacBook Pro is more than enough. There is also a wide range of dedicated audio interfaces, MAC plugins, and music-making software like Logic Pro that makes Apple computer a serious candidate for your music studio. Apple is perceived as expensive compared with the PC. Apple computers are more expensive but offer a different perspective, it is just like a premium car, you get extra safety, comfort, quality materials, and exclusivity.
In the field of music production, Apple does have a big drawback. Also, if you want more memory or more storage space you have to pay extra. For the PC you can get a huge amount of free VST instruments and other cool freeware plugins and software. PC computers are more flexible and can keep up with your budget. For example, you can build a PC yourself ordering different components from different manufacturers. Last edited by troggg; 1 week ago at PM.. Some other random dots to connect And on the Windows side of the game, many companies were wary of piracy culture aka warez and hesitated to release stuff there.
I personally have never used a macos untill yesterday , I hadn't had enough time to play around with it yet but the shortcut keys are messing me up because I'm so use to using windows so far. Last edited by joeq; 1 week ago at PM.. I would give this exact same advice to someone who was going to Windows from Mac. What you are used to is always "easier" and always "makes more sense" because you are used to it. Obviously all those people want a real Unix commandline in their music computers.
Well Windows recently built "Linux subsystem for Windows" to help "all those people". I was just trying to make the point that familiar is easier, as joeq was saying. One thing that was causing a recent shift to Windows from pros was that Nvidia gpu's were smashing Radeon gpu's for many workflows. Not sure how the M1 factors into that workload, but I think if you need a "tensor core" for your work, you had to switch to Windows the last few years.
One reason that hasn't been brought up yet is pricing, as in A-list studios and post houses like Skywalker Ranch or whatever funded by the deepest-pocketed entertainment conglomerates could afford the premium priced Macs and peripherals to begin with, and then they can write them off over time.
So why switch to something unfamiliar to save a few pesos when in the long run the high price of admission is essentially meaningless to them?
Some of my reasons to use a mac. Receiving calls with the Phone in other room? So no social media while you work… Sending files from iDevice into mac and viceversa. The beauty of using a Mac for your music is the fact you can hook up interfaces, launch pads and almost anything else, all day long, everyday, old or new.
You can spend more time worrying about your mix-down instead of compatibility issues! Apple have continually striven to find new ways to make every new device stronger and more robust. Every year Apple refine and improve Mac OS X to help with memory management, improve speed as well as system reliability. One of the most important tools to have for your music creation is a solid system.
This doesn't have to be a massively high spec machine, although faster processors and higher ram capacities help, you just need a solid reliable partner in crime. Apple deliver on this, both for hardware and software. Back to the music, some of the the most famous and successful music producers have a great eye for detail when it comes to the recording, mix down and execution of their projects.
Macs have always had a significant life span, often lasting between five-and-eight years. If you are a musician starting out, then you want to be sure that the machine you are purchasing is going to have your back for the foreseeable future.
One thing is for certain, Apple work very hard to make all its MacBooks as thin and light and as portable, as possible see the all new design MacBook, for example.
Speaking of the MacBook Pro, for the models onwards, Apple adopted a stunning, high-quality retina display in a thinner enclosure. This meant that carrying around a or inch Mac to live gigs was almost a case of double-checking you had it with you, compared with the heavier pre models which were still notably thinner and lighter than comparable Windows-based portables. This means the MacBook Pro is great for live acts on the road or flying regularly where weight is a delicate subject, but you still need all that horse-power for creating and producing whilst on the go.
Hudson Mohawke, the Scottish electronic producer, is a known fan, and with good reason. Once you get past the garish colour scheme and 'edgy' gamer branding, you have an immensely capable, lightweight computer that would rival many traditional desktop arrangements.
Microsoft's second attempt at a pure laptop device is an absolute winner in our view, and while it doesn't represent a huge overhaul of the original Surface Laptop, it offers improvements in all the areas we were hoping for, including updated hardware that brings serious performance benefits.
This is a laptop that finally delivers on what Microsoft set out to do with the original: a pure, powerful Windows 10 laptop experience. If you're not sold on the 2-in-1 nature of the Surface Book 2, but love Microsoft's premium build quality and design, then the Surface Laptop 2 is the laptop for you.
A very worth addition to our best laptops for music production guide. MSI is one of the more respected names in gaming PCs, so it figures that their flagship mid-range offer features some decent internals. The MSI GF63 is the ideal blend of performance and aesthetics, and would make a superb laptop for anyone using their laptop for live performance or as a portable studio on account of its thin form factor and cooling features.
Performance-wise, it's packing a 2. As your live sets or studio sessions grow in size, so too can your laptop. While it may not have the best keyboard in the world, the Samsung Notebook 9 is still one of the best laptops you can buy. Packed with more horsepower than the MacBook Pro, but at a much lower price, Samsung has crafted a laptop that has just as much substance as it does style.
As Microsoft's riposte to Apple's dominance, the stakes were high when it released the Surface Pro series. With Apple's hold on creative professionals being so strong, the Surface Pro had a lot to live up to. And, with the Microsoft Surface Pro 7, it it edging ever closer to bridging that gap.
Admittedly, a razor thin two-in-one is never going to be the production powerhouse that a dedicated PC or Mac would be, but as a device geared towards portability it's near impeccable.
But as a premium device that can handle music, along with everything else life can throw at you, it's a solid option. A quoted full day of battery life is not to be sniffed at either. Asus has struck gold with its new refresh of its ZenBook Flip S 2-in-1 laptop, with the Asus ZenBook Flip S UX impressing us so much it's made it's way into our list of the 10 best laptops for music production you can buy right now. With a new Kaby Lake R 8th-generation processor powering the device, plenty of RAM and a super-fast PCIe SSD in certain models, this is an absolutely stunning addition to our rundown of the best laptops for music production.
Its 2-in-1 design means you can use it as both a laptop and a tablet, and while it's not as affordable as some machines on this list, if you have the budget you'll be really happy with this fantastic device.
Of course, in the process of demolishing the competition, Acer did have to cut a few corners in order to keep the price so impressively low. Choosing a laptop capable of running CPU-intensive audio production work can be tricky. Some options focus heavily on battery life. Others major on performance, and favour higher-grade processors CPUs to ensure operations run snappily. The CPU is what does the real work. So every time you load a new MIDI instrument, fill the piano roll with data, or bounce down audio to new tracks, you're asking the CPU to translate it into sound.
Adding extra effects or instrument plugins works the CPU. Exporting finished versions of your tracks works the CPU. You get the picture.
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