Bulls Hit said:
Inevitable? Hardly.
In the 10 months I've had my P4-based daw, it hasn't ever crashed on me. Not even once.
I don't undrstand this 'downtime' you speak of
Look I don't know you well or familiar with your work, or what you record so I won't make any assumptions about you or your situation. Please don't take this personally but I record for MONEY and I have a particular method of recording that is... pretty intense compared to most people.
However, when I record I put equipment THRU THE GRISTMILL. I punish my gear with massive simultaneous recording. This is the simultaneous track list from a recent session:
1 Kick drum mic 1
2 Kick drum mic 2
3 Kick drum trigger
4 Snare mic 1
5 Under snare mic 2
6 Snare trigger
7 R Tom
8 R tom trigger
9 L Tom
10 L Tom trigger
11 Overhead L
12 Overhead R
13 Overhead C
14 Room mic L
15 Room mic R
16 High Hat
17 scratch bass track (to be discarded, but still recorded)
18 scratch guitar track
19 scratch vocal track
20 click/time code
That's 20 simultaneous tracks at 24 bit/96khz! Each track is going to be about 16 megs a minute... 320 megs total a minute. Roughly 5.4 megs a second write to disk.
The cost of converters to run such a system on a PC would be very pricey indeed. The RAM and processor speed to run a Windows XP system to handle that is expensive. The software environment, drivers and disk properties have to be immaculate and error-free. The disks *MUST* be 10k RPM, plus you need--and I mean need--a second disk to record to (which any PC daw user knows).
By the time you add all that up you could have gotten a hardware DAW that can handle that without a single hiccup.
Don't even get into plugins for digital mixing. I'm the kind of guy that is running a compressor and EQ on all channels. My average track count is 32-40 for a rock song because of the overdubs I do. Even bussing subgroups to effects, like guitars and so on, creates an amazing load on the processor with all that information to process. Then add in the reverb stereo bus, the drums to compressor bus, the additional vocal processing that has to be high end plus the reverb dedicated to the vocal line...
Trust me, I always have ended up pushing too hard against the computer's glass ceiling and it completely ruins my engineering vibe. When I press play I don't want to hear silence while a buffer builds up, or hear the CPU stutter because of what's going on, and I can't tolerate any screw ups while tracking.
Hardware is the only solution CURRENTLY that can meet my needs.
By all means if you are only doing a pansy mono or stereo track at once, or a relatively wimpy 8 channels simultaneous recording... get a computer. It will probably fit your needs. For me it just doesn't cut it.