But can someone please tell me what mainframe I should buy to run this baby ?
Phew....Talk about high maintainence
She's a good girl though...Nasty but nice
The voice in that preset is triggering on my setup. WinXP Diva480 Ableton 8.2.7Load Factory -> Fernando's Hardware Factory -> FMR Jupiter VH Jump. Stab C2 rapidly. As it cycles around the 8 Voices it always drops out at Voice 4.
Interesting. Wonder why it doesn't work for me...snigelx wrote:The voice in that preset is triggering on my setup. WinXP Diva480 Ableton 8.2.7Load Factory -> Fernando's Hardware Factory -> FMR Jupiter VH Jump. Stab C2 rapidly. As it cycles around the 8 Voices it always drops out at Voice 4.
Thank you for checking on this Urs. I have instability in both the 32 and 64 bit versions of Cubase 6 (latest version) on my Windows 7 64 bit system (i7 3.4 ghz machine 16 gb ram). Plug in will sometimes cause loud noises (especially when changing patches), behave unpredictably or cause the host to become unresponsive completely. But when the Diva singsUrs wrote:I'm investigating it...
Holy shxt! I think I'll get a new heatsink tomorrow just in case.snigelx wrote:This is funny,... Days after installing Diva and running my CPU ragged with tesst-driving the synth, my laptop's 2.5Ghz Intel C2Duo Cpu ran too hot for too long and fried the integrated graphics component alongg w a few other components under the large heatsink on the mainboard :p
Do that! It's a great world!Well, looks like I too will be joining the 64-bit OS i7 quad core world shortly.
You might be just fine with the i5-2400. Unless you overclock or expect to use those extra cores it might not be necessary. Although it's a review for gaming PC chips, CPU performance is heavily stressed by both domains. Or get the i7 if you wanna.paterpeter wrote:Do that! It's a great world!Well, looks like I too will be joining the 64-bit OS i7 quad core world shortly.
http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/gam ... 077-4.htmlIntel's Sandy Bridge microarchitechture is undeniably fast. Test data suggests that the Core i5-2400 can stand toe-to-toe with Core i7-900-series processors when it comes to gaming performance. We're not talking about the entry-level models, either. This affordable processor has the chops to compete with Intel's thousand-dollar Extreme Edition chips.
As great as the Core i5-700-series chips are, the Core i5-2000 processors hit the afterburners and fly right by. Plus, the LGA 1156 interface is essentially dead, so it seems silly to sink any money into it at this point.
Thanks for the reviewbmrzycki wrote:You might be just fine with the i5-2400. Unless you overclock or expect to use those extra cores it might not be necessary. Although it's a review for gaming PC chips, CPU performance is heavily stressed by both domains. Or get the i7 if you wanna.paterpeter wrote:Do that! It's a great world!Well, looks like I too will be joining the 64-bit OS i7 quad core world shortly.
Good luck! If I were personally buying today I'd get an i5-2500 (not the i5-2500K version, I never overclock). Here's an interesting write-up I found that discusses the differences between the i5s and the i7s:snigelx wrote:I appreciate any additional advice or personal experience anyone may offer using mentioned CPU's
Thanks again, for the good info. Acc to that article we're talking about an insignificant incr in clockspeed 100Mhz b/t the two classes (versus cost). You may have saved me money with that link. I am definitely on tight budget here. I will take this up with the Rain rep next wk.bmrzycki wrote:Good luck! If I were personally buying today I'd get an i5-2500 (not the i5-2500K version, I never overclock). Here's an interesting write-up I found that discusses the differences between the i5s and the i7s:snigelx wrote:I appreciate any additional advice or personal experience anyone may offer using mentioned CPU's
http://www.brighthub.com/computing/hard ... 48391.aspx
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