It's time to upgrade the base hardware, and I could not find a clear answer in threads people had already posted.
creamware board : pulsar II pro (aka Scope Studio)
I use logic 5.0, and it's kinda picky during lots of tracks how well the board was designed.
is it safe to buy a non intel board
Specifically concerning PCI bandwidth
suggestions for LGA775 boards that will support 1+ Scope cards?
core2 duo + new mobo - safe to buy non intel board?
core2 duo + new mobo - safe to buy non intel board?
-terrac, It's whats for dinner
Minister of tiny plastic robots
CloudFactory
Minister of tiny plastic robots
CloudFactory
no they don't have to be intel boards, any quality motherboard with an intel chipset should work. why not get an intel motherboard though? there aren't really any better quality boards out there and most other maker's boards that are any good are quite expensive by comparison. there's also a lot to be said for the likelyhood of stability when chipset, motherboard and processor are designed to be specifically compatible, and all are the standard that the os was designed to...
if you want to really experiment with overclocking, the intel boards aren't that great, it's true, but i prefer stability over speed in a tool that's supposed to allow the creative juices to flow. leave bleeding edge to gamers, unless you're primarily a gamer, in which case overclock away........
if you want to really experiment with overclocking, the intel boards aren't that great, it's true, but i prefer stability over speed in a tool that's supposed to allow the creative juices to flow. leave bleeding edge to gamers, unless you're primarily a gamer, in which case overclock away........
core2 duo + new mobo - safe to buy non intel board?
Everyone, thanks for the help. I have taken what you said into consideration and have decided on the following setup. Please let me know if there are Pulsar related problems to this core setup.
Intel D975XBX2 LGA 775 Intel 975X ATX
Intel Core 2 Duo E6600 Conroe 2.4GHz LGA 775 Processor
2x 2gb DDR2 667mhz RAM
Nvidia 7950 Gfx card
This is an upgrade from the 1.4ghz althlon XP / DDR 333 system that has served me well for many a year. Although I did occasionally hit a PCI overload. I am hoping to double my track count with this new setup or at least be able to run a coupl of NI plugings in real-time without having to bounce constantly.
Intel D975XBX2 LGA 775 Intel 975X ATX
Intel Core 2 Duo E6600 Conroe 2.4GHz LGA 775 Processor
2x 2gb DDR2 667mhz RAM
Nvidia 7950 Gfx card
This is an upgrade from the 1.4ghz althlon XP / DDR 333 system that has served me well for many a year. Although I did occasionally hit a PCI overload. I am hoping to double my track count with this new setup or at least be able to run a coupl of NI plugings in real-time without having to bounce constantly.
-terrac, It's whats for dinner
Minister of tiny plastic robots
CloudFactory
Minister of tiny plastic robots
CloudFactory
-
- Posts: 134
- Joined: Fri Apr 06, 2007 9:48 am
I've had good luck building PCs based on the recommendations of arstechnica.com. Go to the System Guide and check out their good/better/best recommendations. The "Hot Rod" is usually a good choice for audio. I haven't built a Core2Duo yet, but notice that they recommend an Asus mobo, which I've used and liked.
http://arstechnica.com/guides.ars
http://arstechnica.com/guides.ars
Most people interested in building a machine, and reading reviews are noob gamers. They want to overclock, and mod their machine like it's a 1996 Acura.
I care about stability. I like to go months on end without a reboot.
Overclocking will generally not yeild that level of stability.
You can find evidence of this mentality in the packaging of most computer components.
Gone are the plain boxes marked with a part number, and now you will find 3d rendered graphics of a girl in scant clothing.
I think of Ars, HardOCP, Toms, and most othter sites cater towards this 'extreme' gamer, and not to the hard core workstation user. Probably because we can keep a single machine for 4 years without too much upgrading. We make up a smaller market share.
anyways... rant over. my new parts should be here wednesday. i will post how my setup works after that.
I care about stability. I like to go months on end without a reboot.
Overclocking will generally not yeild that level of stability.
You can find evidence of this mentality in the packaging of most computer components.
Gone are the plain boxes marked with a part number, and now you will find 3d rendered graphics of a girl in scant clothing.
I think of Ars, HardOCP, Toms, and most othter sites cater towards this 'extreme' gamer, and not to the hard core workstation user. Probably because we can keep a single machine for 4 years without too much upgrading. We make up a smaller market share.
anyways... rant over. my new parts should be here wednesday. i will post how my setup works after that.
-terrac, It's whats for dinner
Minister of tiny plastic robots
CloudFactory
Minister of tiny plastic robots
CloudFactory
i do have the intel D975XBX2 which seems to be THE current most stable motherboard according to reviews.... This board offers 3 pcie x16 and 2 pci slots which is enough if you plan (like me !) to put 2 big scope pro inside. I am really happy with it : simple, stable and beautiful ! quite expensive but it is really worth it !
Jo
Jo
I bought the th D975XBX2 and it's freaking rad... BUT check my thread on problem solving about the scope software installer crashing every time I try to run it under every type of windows startup (safe, debug, selective startup)
what am I to do..
I am running XP corp SP2
what am I to do..
I am running XP corp SP2
-terrac, It's whats for dinner
Minister of tiny plastic robots
CloudFactory
Minister of tiny plastic robots
CloudFactory