Looking to buy a new PC/ iMac.. help needed!

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mark2112

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Hi,

i am looking to buy a new pc or possibly an iMac.

I currently use Acid Pro 4 on a very old pc, which i use to record guitar tracks over the top of midi drums. The guitar is plugged into a Line 6 Pod 2 and then straight into the PC tower and I don't have any latency issues from this.

However, with the intention of upgrading my basic set-up, I have just bought a copy of Acid Pro 7 after being impressed by a friend's version, particularly the kitcore drum program that comes with it and can turn midi drums into a very authentic sounding kit. My current PC is too old to run Acid Pro 7, so I am looking to buy a new PC.

For around £600 i can get a decent PC that will run Acid Pro 7 (custom built and tailored to my recording needs), but this seems to me to be quite a lot of money, as I am thinking that for an extra £300 i can get an iMac. (possibly not tailored to my recording needs?) One drawback is that Acid Pro is windows only.

So the question is: should i buy an iMac and get used to recording with that using a different DAW or buy the £600 PC and use Acid Pro?

I have also just purchased a Line 6 UX2 with the intention of using that with whichever DAW I eventually use.

Any help would be appreciated!
 
Given that you're planning to upgrade acid pro, and you're already familiar with it, I'd just go PC.

The mac thing really is preference; If you're happy where you are, stay there. :)

Just to add credibility to the opinion, I'm totally a mac guy. ;)
 
I honestly think i would prefer to get a mac, but its a big step obviously and im not used to any of the DAW's that are used on a mac.

New Apple iMac 21.5 inch All-In-One Desktop PC (Intel Core i5 2.5GHz Quad-Core Processor, 2X2GB RAM, 500GB HDD, AMD Radeon HD 6750M with 512MB graphics) (Launched May 2011) for £919.99 on amazon.

is this one going to be already set up to a decent standard for recording with an interface in front of it?
 
Right, you've already made your mind up then?



Yes, that imac will be pretty impressive, and is certainly an appropriate machine for recording.

If you already have a reasonable screen, you might look at the mac mini server instead.
They're a good bit cheaper, and every bit as capable.
 
Well, I'm a SERIOUS IBM compatible bigot (pro tip: anybody who refers to a PC as an 'IBM compatible PC' is decrepit). In the Mac universe there are only a limited number of configurations but when you roll-your-own PC there's just a near infinite degree of granularity and you get SO MUCH MORE bang for the buck. On the flip side the shear amount of choice can be daunting.
 
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