what difference does an expensive soundcard make? if i were using something high grade rather than the standard mac 1/8" output, would it make a difference to what i hear?
what other uses do they have?
any help would be great
thanks manTeReKeTe wrote:they get sound in and out of the computer.
the $ you pay for a quality unit is for the converters, wiring, bundled software and included preamps/di's etc; if you're not recording any audio in, just using samples and whatnot, you can skimp on this somewhat, but still--the quality of the converter has a gigantic effect on what you hear out of your speakers. Muddy, noisy audio is what you get from the cheap shit.
many many thanks for your thoughtful answers! exactly the information i was looking forTeReKeTe wrote:unfortuntely, yes-- mac's audio is absolute shit (and i say this having owned 4 macs). I dunno why they can't get it right-- it's the industry standard for audio yet their built-in materials are tripe.
a converter won't change anything on the inside-- a crap sample will still be a crap sample--but you'll be better able to make mix decisions without hard drive noise, interference and all the other crap that comes in through a computers output. plus whatever comes out will just sound better.
what you get depends on your budget-- i still have a $35 griffin imic for location stuff, but in the studio i use a metric halo box. Folks doing the ableton thing all seem to be using one of the m-audio firewire boxes, which sound good to my ears.
but anything, even the imic, will be a step up from what's included in the actual computer.
so trueFSTZ wrote:all about the AD / DA conversion
you really do get what you pay for
The most practical way would be:concept_ wrote:rather than start a new thread, i thought i'd enquire it in this discussion as i'm sure it is related.
What kind of hardware would i need for the following situation?:- Want to hook up a macbook pro to a pioneer djm mixer so i can record mixes from 2 turntables using soundforge, will be using serato eventually as well so would want this hooked up to the MBP...However, also want to use MBP as day to day music playing device ie play songs through Itunes or whatnot preferably through a line input of the mixer so i can keep monitor speakers (KRK RP6s) hooked up to the mixer and not have to muck about with wiring etc. all the time. Also will be getting a MIDI keyboard for production use with logic on the MBP eventually, so will need some way to hook this up. Would be very helpful if someone could tell me what I need in terms of hardware or an easier way of hooking all this stuff up (basically so i can keep monitors in one place but use them for all of the above). I am a tech newbie past turntables and mixers. Any specific hardware recommendations for my needs would be appreciated as well, though not too expensive (up to £150).
thankyou for the informative reply. I know little about soundcards etc. but am slowly learning and understanding the terms and technical info.Lojik wrote:concept_ wrote: The most practical way would be:
USB Soundcard for laptop with 2x 1/4" inputs and 2x 1/4" outputs (left and right)
Mixing desk with stereo output e.g.
http://www.thomann.de/gb/behringer_xenyx_1204.htm
Then hook your speakers to output of mixing desk, hook the DJ mixer to a stereo input on the desk, and the outputs of the USB soundcard to a stereo input on the desk.
That will give you full volume and mixing control over your decks and your computer through the mixing desk, and will also give you room to connect other things like samplers or CD players to your computer really easily through the desk.
You could probably set it up without the mixing desk, with the DJ mixer and speakers directly connected to the In/Out of the soundcard, but you'd have far less versatility and control.
thanks!lilt wrote:AD converters: 24bit, 64x oversampling
DA converters: 24bit, 128x oversampling
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