Well there are several strategies. One is to buy the latest and greatest at top dollar but deal with the most problems. Another strategy is as you guys mentioned - to hang on to older working stuff for as long as possible. I did that before with a Mac 7500 and later G4/400. I ended up donating the 7500 to charity when it became obsolete but still working fine. I sold the G4 for $400 which was less than I paid for the ram in it. I followed a third strategy in recently selling my G5 at a decent price ($1100) and buying an Intel-mac. I felt that I waited a year or two on that, so they had time to get most of the bugs out. I started having the feeling that the new OS and the new versions of Logic were going to be optimized and written specifically for the intel macs and would render the best efficiency. This transition was not painless. A number of plugins won't work on the intel macs at all. Some required paid upgrades. The most annoying to me was spending $100 for the upgrade to Absynth 4 - but it won't open in place of songs saved with Absynth 1, 2, or 3, so you lose all your patches. The only advantage to Ab4 over Ab3 was an improved browser which turns out to be totally unworkable and worse than Abs3). I also had to pay to upgrade utilities like Diskwarrior, Techtool Pro, and Toast. But this transition is inevitable for all of us - unless you plan to hang on to dead-end archetecture forever. I think I already read that Apple plans to eventually discontinue support for the G5 platform - so maybe in a few years the OS won't even run on those. The only realistic question is WHEN rather IF to transition to an intel mac. I felt it best to get top dollar for my G5 and go ahead and make the jump. Now I have a machine that will take advantage of all the OS and Logic improvements to come - for several years. Plus I get some (not a lot) of increased stability and efficiency with greater processing power. --- In Logic_Cafe@yahoogroups.com, "Bob Safir" <bsafir@...> wrote: > In a similar shift to what Mark did, I made a conscious choice to buy one of > the last quad Mac Pro's with Tiger factory-installed on it. I have stayed > with Logic 7.2.3. I then bought a copy of Kontakt 2 (very inexpensive > because Kontakt 3 is out now) so that I could successfully run all of my > East/West libraries, Garritan, and other software with no compatibility > problems posed by the player-only Kontakt versions. > > I have not regretted this decision for a single moment, now that I have been > able to continue working and the Mac Pro has taken everything I've thrown at > it without a single hiccup. It's a powerful system that should keep me > happy for a long time to come. > > It's nice to have the "latest, greatest" hardware, but with all of the new > complexities involved, compatibility has to rule. >
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Re: [LUG] [OT]Take the New Mac Back?
2008-01-19 by gregory_a_moore
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