
mjbphotos
Moderator
I think it's funny that people are arguing cost and flexibility/track count as both benefits of a computer. That's extremely misleading. Let's say that you don't need to buy a computer because you already have one. That's already assuming a lot, because most people will also tell you that your music computer should be dedicated only to that. Nonetheless, let's say that you don't have to buy a computer. In order to do things like "record 32 tracks at once" (as Bobbsy mentioned), you'd need:
A 32-channel A/I or 32 channels combined of A/I!
Now I'm no computer recording expert. I like analog for my own stuff, but I have a small DAW rig for my work for the editing features. I put that together with an $80 Dell and an M-Audio Delta 1010LT (8 in, 8 out) A/I for $200 (new). And that's all I've needed because I was able to use the mixer from my analog rig. So I have no idea how much 32 channels of A/I cost, but I can't imagine it's cheap. I don't even know if you could use 4 separate Delta 1010LT's to do that (like I said, I'm no expert). But even if you could, and you bought them used (about $75 on ebay), that alone would put you at $300.
Maybe Bobbsy DOES have a 32-input AI, but I think what he meant is he can mix down 32+ tracks at one time - no bouncing needed. You can't do that with stand-alone recorders. As I mentioned with the little Boss BR600, it was 8 tracks (4 mono and 2 stereo) at a time, after you did 1 bounce, then you had your bounced stereo track, so only 6 more tracks next bounce ...
Portability, for sure the stand-alone wins. Then again, when I see any pro/semi-pro bands recording their gigs, they are not using a stand-alone. They've got a laptop hooked directly to their soundboard via some type of interface.
Computer issues - had a weird 'hang-up' with Reaper a month or two back, but all I had to do was reboot Reaper each time. Harddrive crashed on my last computer. Driver issues - nope. Plug-in problems - a couple that didn't want to load, but they were freebies, I just deleted them. I mentioned the power supply issue with the Boss. Also had a problem with the selection wheel thingie - would jump around when turned too fast, just was wearing out, I guess, that would have been another $75+ to fix, if I had wanted to.
Just like recording to 4-track cassette machines 20 years ago, recording with any device gives you experience that you can then move on with. I don't regret the Boss purchase, but at the same time wish I had moved up to computer recording sooner!