XPost: uk.comp.sys.mac
Jeff Gaines <
[email protected]> wrote:
I am awaiting receipt of an instrument called a Re.corder which looks
vaguely like a Descant recorder but is also a MIDI controller. It comes
with an app for iOS and Android which will get me going.
However, if I want to use it with a PC or Windows laptop there's a fair
bit of work and expense involved with no real guarantee of success. It
seems to be different with a MacBook of some sort since they appear to
have built in MIDI along with Garage Band and a variety of DAWs and VST
hosts at astonishingly reasonable prices.
Any musicians here who can tell me what musical stuff comes with a used MacBook that runs Big Sur (is that the latest?) and/or who can make recommendation for a reasonably priced DAW or VST host?
Any MacBook models to avoid, I am looking for used around £500?
I'll crosspost this to uk.comp.sys.mac since they know more about audio
there (hello Ian...).
On the hardware side, I don't think there a lot of difference between the models audio-wise, apart from quality of speakers etc.
Macbooks have changed a few times. The upcoming release Monterey is only supported on 2015 or later. You can actually install newer releases on
older hardware 'unofficially' - look up dosdude1 - but there are usually
some glitches like lack of graphics acceleration.
Retina Macbook Pro: 2013-2015. I wouldn't buy older than a 2015 because Monterey doesn't support them.
'Butterfly' Macbook Pro: 2016-2018. These have keyboards that break and some people don't like them
2019 MBP: better keyboard, Intel CPU
2020 MBP: Apple Silicon CPU
Macbook Air: 2010-2017 is all the same design. The screens on these are somewhat cheap and nasty.
2018-early 2020: much better screen, Intel CPUs. Much less difference
between the MBA and MBP (the MBP got thinner)
Late 2020: Apple Silicon CPU
Macbook (2015-2017): light but weedy and underpowered. Only one port.
Avoid.
Apple's in transition to Apple Silicon at the moment, so a 2020 Apple
Silicon Mac would be more future proof but probably out of budget.
The 2013-2015 MBP and 2010-2017 MBA have upgradeable storage, on the others it's soldered in and non-upgradeable. There's a hack to fit NVMe M.2 sticks
to the older MBP/MBA which means you don't have to pay the Apple tax for storage.
You'll have to look at pricing, but I'd guess you could look at a 2015 MBP
or a 2015-17 MBA. Or a ~2016-18 MBP if you get on with the keyboard and
are happy to take the risk of it breaking (since you won't get AppleCare on
a used machine).
I don't know what kind of CPU/GPU grunt you would need for audio stuff?
I'd guess a Macbook Pro is probably better?
Also worth mentioning:
https://www.apple.com/uk/shop/refurbished
where an Apple Silicon Mac Mini can be had for about £600 - could be a
better option if you don't need a laptop - get the RAM you need then add a bigger USB SSD.
Theo
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