License:Freeware (Free) File Size:645 Kb.Pathology Laboratory is a software project for software engineering course in university of isfahan. File Name:SoundStudio-1.0.6.tar.gz. It was subsequently improved by Robin Whitehead. If you have a tech or buying/selling-related question, please check out our Daily Advice Thread or r/AppleHelp! CommunitySound Studio is a Tcl/Tk application written by Paul Sharpe as his third year individual project, for which he received the Microsoft Prize for Software Engineering. Hindenburg Journalist lets you concentrate on your story while we ensure audio quality.Welcome to r/Apple, the unofficial community for Apple news, rumors, and discussions.No rude, offensive, or hateful comments. No editorialized link titles (use the original source's title if applicable). Posts must foster reasonable discussion. No memes, direct images or contextless image/video posts. It has a lot of Farsi (Persian) documentation.A more in-depth version of the rules can be found here No posts or comments relating to buying, selling, trading, giveaways or asking for advice about any of those topics. No content related to piracy or illegal activities. Self-promotion is allowed on Sundays only, strictly reserved for app developers and must be in the form of a self-post. We may approve your post if it is a high-level issue that can't be found through searches, or if it affects a large amount of people. No support questions outside of the Daily Advice Thread.Comments that are spreading COVID vaccine misinformation/claims are not allowed.Ask in our Daily Advice Thread or in our dedicated sister sub /r/AppleWhatShouldIBuy! See also the iPhone Upgrade Wiki for more information. These belong in the beta subreddits listed below. No posts about bugs in beta software.
![]() Sound Engineering Software Software Project ForStellar.You did jump in the conversation late that you didn't start, I didn't see the change in name since your comments continues where the other guy left off and dovetailed in nicely.I fully understand that people consider internal storage to be important. I've made exactly one 7post in this thread and apparently I keep disregarding that. You are just arguing for no reason, since you just agreed.You agree that if he wants internal expansion a MacBook pro is not a good option any more unless he gets the hamstrung 13 inch non retina.That's priceless. If you'd like to view their content together, click here.This subreddit is not endorsed or sponsored by Apple Inc.The only reason someone needs a lot of internal storage is if they want to have a truly portable rig.Thank you for acknowledging the '3rd point' so early in your reply. This fundamental difference in audience is why we support two communities, r/Apple and r/AppleHelp. I would personally hesitate to call it "engineering" even if it's what the music industry calls audio production.I used to have a mid 2009 Macbook pro for production and about a year and a half ago I switched to a custom built desktop computer that triple boots OS X Mavericks(mac), Linux (arch linux), and Windows 8.1. Having a laptop tethered to an external brick might be something you want, but the OP is the person we are discussing, and he clearly wants internal expansion.EDIT: And notice the lack of downvotes beside your name, even though you are arguing an obvious logical point.I'm assuming you mean professional audio production/mixing/mastering. Required, no.Not critical for you. So if you're recording and monitoring live instruments this is something definitely worth considering.Reaper (my main DAW) is very flexible and by far the best DAW for my workflow. I use primarily Reaper (64-bit) on Windows 8.1 with a RME HDSPe AIO for two reasons.Windows (from what I've been told by those with far greater computer knowledge than I) currently has better round trip latency than OS X because of something to do with the underlying structure check out: DAW Bench. I've also tried out almost every DAW currently on the market and here is my two cents if it helps you.It's going to heavily depend on what DAW you are going to use to choose your base operating system/computer and vice versa. Sidenote: I forgot to mention that if you're doing audio work professionally there's a good chance you'll have to use either OS X or Windows because Linux really doesn't have much support from DAW or plugin developers (let's hope that changes in the near future as well!). Reaper is not for someone who wants things to be super simple, it requires a bit of tweaking, but boy oh boy does it pay off.OS X (in my opinion) has a much better user experience than Windows 8.1. Although who really knows with Avid's recent financial reports what the future industry standard will be. ![]() What apple wants for their workstations is ridiculous.Also if anyone is curious thunderbolt 2.0 is available on this motherboard. Anyone who tells you it's "confusing" or "radically different" is only referring to the new "Windows 8/Metro Apps" and it's completely optional (for now).If you're handy with computers and want a beast for cheap go with a hackintosh. It's basically a sleeker Windows 7. I don't use a single "metro app". It's got it's problems (all OSes do) but you can use it entirely like Windows 7 in desktop mode. I think ever since I've switched to Windows 8.1 for my recording needs with Reaper, things have become slightly more complicated but for me it's worth it.Also, don't let anyone deter you from Windows 8.1. The computer you'll need going to depend VERY heavily on your specific situation, what DAW you use, and whether or not you're using primarily plugins or live instruments. After buying a $50 cable and a pretty expensive hard drive enclosure I'll be sticking with internal SATA or mSATA for my storage.TL DR Windows definitely requires more tweaking but it's true you get lower round trip latencies when using the correct DAW (AFAIK). Also, thunderbolt cables and peripherals are extremely expensive. Photos for the mac reviewThunderbolt peripherals seem really snappy and responsive to me. The new UA Apollo audio interfaces with Thunderbolt connections are the fastest and best-sounding I've used. You'll need external hardware, but you would for a PC as well. I work at a major game company and a majority of the sound design is done on Macs, and the complete, very dense, complex and interactive score/soundtrack for one of our more popular games was done completely on an older MacBook Pro. My better half has some training in audio engineering, I do not but am looking to learn.There's also a possibility of one of us doing an internship with a local, highly accomplished audio engineer. The only pro audio application I missed from my old PC days was Sony's SoundForge, which is really useful for doing edits to single files, and batch processing to folders of files, and now that Sony has finally released a Mac version, I don't ever use PCs for any audio or media work.Portability is the reason why we are looking for a laptop not a tower, thank you for asking.As for current requirements I apologize if my original post seemed a little vague in that regard currently, "we" want to produce our own music (hopefully WELL) as a way to open the door into the professional side of DAWs.
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