![]() ![]()
I'm not an expert in this area, but I do have friends who do this sort of thing for a living (scoring films and TV shows, etc) and they're all on recent Mac Pros that are pretty tricked out with cards and storage. The boot drive should be SSD as well for performance sake, and you'll need tons of RAM as well. wasn't that long ago something that powerful simply didn't exist, and when they first came up to that level they would cost 10x more easily).įor example, that's a huge hard drive (and not one - there aren't any 6TB hard drives I know of, so that would need to be stored on a RAID array just for starters, and that's before you figure out a way to back it all up), and you'll certainly need it to be either SSD or connected by Thunderbolt to get the kind of performance I'm sure you're after. The 2012 will definitely do much better than what you had listed before.Īs I mentioned previously, this is a very daunting challenge given the low budget (yes, £1000 is very low for a machine for what you want to do. As to the Mac Pro you have in your post - with out knowing the year I can't really give you a better answer.Įdit: well you changed a few things before I posted. If the you can find a dual processor Mac Pro 2009 or newer this will give you something that is more upgradeable. I have no idea how many tracks they are running but I think it is around 16-20? I do know it has no problems handling what ever they are doing. Our Audio people have a 2013 iMac, i5 with 8GB and a 1TB internal hard drive an 2TB external thunderbolt connected drive. And yes, Xeon processors are fast but how fast depends on the processor model number. It will let me mix up to six cameras at a time (HD quality) with no hiccups. I have a 2009 firmware updated to 5,1 (2010) so I could run dual Westmere processors. I do very little with audio but I do a lot with Premiere Pro and video. If you go for an older Mac Pro do not go older than the 2009 model (4,1) and 2010 (5,1) is even better. #LOGIC PRO X FOR MAC 10.9.5 PROFESSIONAL#Then, your Mac will prompt you to download the latest compatible version - which is 10.2.2 and is what you want.The Mac Pro is the professional work horse in the Apple line. Then change the system version back to 10.9.5 in the plist and fire up Mac App Store again, go to the "Purchased" tab and click "Download". Once download begins, cancel and delete the download-in-progress and close Mac App Store. Then go back to App Store and "Purchase" Logic Pro X. Then save it and move it back to /System/Library/CoreServices/. Open it in your favorite text editor and change both system versions from 10.9.5 to 10.10. If you don't have another Mac running OS X Yosemite or above at hand, navigate to /System/Library/CoreServices/ in Finder, then drag ist to desktop. ![]() Then, your Mac will prompt you to download the latest compatible version - which is 10.2.2 and is what you want. ![]() You need to purchase it first on a Mac running OS X Yosemite or above, then go back to your Mac running OS X Mavericks, go to the "Purchased" tab and click "Download". With that said, you can not "purchase" Logic Pro X on a Mac running OS X Mavericks. If you are on Mavericks, you wouldn't be missing out too much. The differences between 10.2.2 (Mavericks-competible) and 10.2.4 (latest build) is minute, and there are no file format incompatibilities. However, Logic Pro X 10.2.2 and below are compatible with OS X Mavericks (10.9) and above. No matter which country your Apple ID is set to, the latest version of Logic Pro X (10.2.4) and the second-latest version (10.2.3) are only compatible with OS X Yosemite (10.10) and above. #LOGIC PRO X FOR MAC 10.9.5 UPDATE#Apparently someone at Apple forgot to update all the localized pages for Logic Pro X. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |