Hi i am getting a new pc soon and they all come with vista now. has any one had any problems with vista or is it ok - my main concern is does it eat up all your cpu.
Hi i am getting a new pc soon and they all come with vista now. has any one had any problems with vista or is it ok - my main concern is does it eat up all your cpu.
i got a laptop with vista seems ok, runs ableton & cubase fine, so far no problems.
you'll need 4 gig of ram for audio software as vista uses up nearly a full 1 gig by itself.
personally id ask around for a computer thats backwards compatible with xp and use that instead. vista still has a lot of driver issues that havent been sorted out.
It aint the best, but then it aint the worst. no major issues to report really. But yeah, I would recommend what Baz said.
Bás Ar An Impireacht
fair cheers - i will look at 4 gig and backwards compatability - actually good advice as i would have assumed that they where all backwards compatable
I've been running Vista on my studio PC and laptop for about a year now, no problems at all. As RythmTech said though, you are gonna need as much RAM as possible. It's a hungry old beast.
where can i go for tips on speeding it up (i.e stopping un needed processes and running it a optimum clock speed)
I went with a dual boot setup. Vista for ****in about and XP for audio stuff.
Cant beat the minimum XP driver setup, runs super quick and solid.
I loathe vista
I'm yet to see one tangible benefit over a previously rock solid fast loading optimised XP setup.
After I'd turned off the various flashy graphics, user account control and other crap I didn't want with vista, I had an OS that looked like XP but functioned worse, with heavier load on CPU and RAM. Which sucked.
If you've got RAM and CPU to spare fair enough, personally I'd just reinstall XP over Vista though.
Can anyone reccomend where might be able to find a decent XP laptop without too much fuss (i.e. me having to take off vista and install XP)
Pure F*ckin' Noize Terror...
2nd hand?
Otherwise you might have to specifiy OS free and do it yourself. Only problem being is that laptops often have a zillion drivers and it can get a little fiddly, and sometimes you have to tweak the bios so that you can recognise all the hardware you have.
Yeh, I kind of thought that may be the case. I knew driver issues would be a main ball ache.
Anyone got opinions on toshiba laptops - seen XP downgrades on toshibas from various places, but a couple of people I know have said they had problems with very slow disk accessing on theirs...
Pure F*ckin' Noize Terror...
Why not get a macbook and run bootcamp?
a second hand one isnt going to set you back much and you'll get a rock solid machine.