Max Msp 6 Mac
The Subreddit for all MaxMsp / Jitter / Max for Live / Puredata related needs! News, Patches, Projects - come in, share and enjoy!“Max is an interactive graphical programming environment for music, audio, and media. Max is the graphical programming environment that provides user interface, timing, communications, and MIDI support. MSP adds on real-time audio synthesis and DSP, Jitter extends Max with video and matrix data processing, and Vizzie is a set of modules for quick and unique video creation.“Links:Related Subreddits.
Hp usb disk format tool. For formatting, you need to specify a device (usb-flash drive) and a file system.Developers of the program claim that the FAT is the best format for usb drive to avoid conflicts with other operating systems.
I have had both for years and that article focuses on enterprise use and not really consumer use, definitely not Audio use where every Mac user in their right mind turns off disk encryption. I just bought a new TouchBarPro and the price is astronomical compared to my recently purchased Windows laptops. Like more than double for a comparable machine. Sorry but I really appreciate both and I don't buy into that Apple fan boy crap. There really f.ing expensive. Buy a Mac if you have stuff that won't run on Windows and you can afford it.
If you're on a budget just get a freaking Win machine and don't look back. The article was an example and it most certainly applies to consumers. Encryption is a red herring, not a fundamental component of TCO.Unless you have no income and all the time in the world, your time IS a factor that's worth money and TCO is quite relevant.Yep, Macs cost more - but apart from the build quality, don't underestimate the value that OS X itself brings to the table.
The combination of Unix + CMU's Mach kernel makes for a really reliable platform that supports audio/MIDI way better than does Windows.You'll spend way less time 'managing' a Mac, you don't have to deal with such things as anti-virus blocking your app from running, DLL hell (it' still there), installers replacing a newer C RTS with an older one and then breaking other apps, etc., etc. Our audio plugin host runs on both Windows and Macs and so we see all this stuff with customer support.If you're in the audio world, you don't have to deal with installing MIDI drivers for almost every device you want to connect, you don't have to deal with the problem where audio apps (or their drivers) lock down MIDI and/or audio ports preventing other apps from using them simultaneously, etc., etc.As for MaxMSP, it works way better on Mac than on Windows, there are way more externals available. I've taught Max at a major university and every time we offer that course, the TAs and I spend most of the first class helping the Windows users to get up and running, meanwhile the only thing the Mac users have to do is select a different MIDI output device in the midiout object so MIDI doesn't go to the DLS synth!This is not 'Apple fan boy crap' - it's many years of experience developing applications on Windows, OS X and Linux and (to this day) using all three on a day-to-day basis. While some of this is true, a lot of it is Apple defense logic that we've been taught to regurgitate when someone challenges our beloved Macs. Again, I use both for software engineering and audio, and a lot of what you said just isn't real. Spending less time managing a Mac?
It isn't 1990 any more. In fact that whole paragraph is BS. And as far as installing MIDI drivers?
Max Msp 6 Machine
C'mon dude, I just had a whole bunch of devices go dark because the more recent versions of OSX are no longer supported by the manufacturers.While I find that Macs are more readily set up for better audio work, I still have to tweak my Mac to get the performance out of it just like I tweak my Win machine. Supporting audio/MIDI better? They're about the same.I love the Mac hardware and the OS, but the Apple party line is more crap now than it ever was. The distance between a quality Windows machine and a Mac is not that far apart. The biggest issue - and what most of the crap that Apple users spew is based on - is people buying junk Win machines (and there are plenty out there) then saying that the problem is ALL Windows machines. Since there is only ONE Mac you're getting a guaranteed unit.
So the real difference between Windows and Mac is that you get a lot more choice of Windows machines and you can potentially make a bad choice. The problem isn't the OS or platform, it is the variety in manufacturing - choose a good Win unit, you'll be saving money over a Mac. FAR FAR lower TCO. You might have been taught that, I wasn't! My opinions around TCO are not just based on my own experiences but on readily available data, which you can easily find online from reputable sources.
I'm not driven by the equivalent of Fox News!a lot of it is Apple defense logic that we've been taught to regurgitateWhat is your source for this? Mine is based on feedback from many customers using Windows or Mac versions of our audio plugin host software. Mac users have a much easier time of it.
We see this all the time. Clearly they're not the same since you mostly can't even have two audio apps running at the same time on Windows without a LOT of headache. Nor can you use the same MIDI port with multiple apps as they get locked. There's no IAC so you have to install something like Erichsen's virtualMIDI for that.Musicians using Macs get a lot of benefit precisely because it's easier for developers to support well-defined hardware than it is to deal with the gazillions of variants of hardware combinations in the Windows world.Supporting audio/MIDI better?
They're about the same.Again, you keep focusing on the hardware while ignoring the value of OS X itself, never mind the fact that you also get pretty decent (for most people) office apps (Pages, Numbers, Keynote). Incidentally, for the record, I find those Apple office appsmostly unusable for my needs so I'm stuck with Office anyway. They're also quite buggy if you push on them (Style sheets in Pages are so broken). Oh, wait, Apple fan boys wouldn't say that, would they?Sure, you can get really cheap PC boxes but there's a reason better quality costs more.
You have to consider such things as MTBF which will be much lower on a cheap PC that typically comes with a barely sufficient power supply and consumer hard drives (or really small SSDs), good luck upgrading them, etc.So the real difference between Windows and Mac is that you get a lot more choice of Windows machines.