I see sonica has a laptop with eSATA but they have firewire too, I found Rain with firewire still and of course P-Cal does as well. I reckon those are three of the most common custom built audio computers. RME, MOTU, Presonus all have Firewire cards. (Presonus is mostly firewire) I'm not surprised that there isn't mny mainstream laptops with firewire but then really never was many. My daughter's dell desktop I bought in 06 didn't, in fact the only computer I know in my family or friends circle with firewire is mine. But again that isn't new, it didn't just start vanishing on mainstream computers recently. Besides external drives that often have both firewire and USB I cant thing of many maintream hardware that uses firewire.Download SOphist wrote:i dunno Hink... when i was searching for a laptop i did not find ANY mainstream computer with a FW port. then, this USB 3 thing and eSATA coming along, it might be tempting to some manufacturers to take advantage of the inherent "awesome!" factor. it will take it's time, though.Hink wrote:So you're simply stating your opinion on Firewire. gotcha.I can't imagine Firewire going anywhere to soon and P-cal (PC Audio Labs) offers Firewire 800 on all their audio pcs. I think too many big players are too deep into Firewire for there to be much to worry about in the near future.
sorry for the OT.
I suspect for a while anyhow it's going to be an evolving competition in the audio world and I just dont see firewire being a thing of the past for audio. If that were to happen there would be some very upset customers, there are a lot of high priced firewire cards out there. Too many for it to be obsolete in my opinion.
Of course everything changes so fast who knows
EDIT according to what I just read usb 3.0 is suppose to "crush" eSATA and firewire. But even with that firewire studios can often do daisy chain. That's a lot of hardware to change out quickly.
