Ok, let me walk through this:
Your specs are good, so no issues there. Near future, you may want to spring for more RAM, but that is not your issue right now. You HD looks to be a hybrid, part SSD and part spinning disk. Either way, HD should be fine.
So, DAW, I use Ableton so I can help with that. Cubase should be close to the same thing, so once we get Ableton working, then Cubase should fall in line. One is going to be your buffer size and the other is your sample rate. 192 is rather on the high side, I usually set my to 44/16. Try that for now (it is CD quality and will be fine, when you are going really great work, you can increase).
Also, MIDI doesn't use ASIO, so let's make sure we are using the correct terminology. ASIO is for analog capture only, since your a Fender guy, let's just record analog. MIDI is totally different.
Make sure your buffer setting on your interface is set for 512 (we can play around with it later. Sample rates are in 64, 128, 256, 512, 1024). Now Ableton has in the hardware device settings a place to do set buffer as well, however, some ASIO drivers don't allow an external calls. So you set it inside the ASIO driver, which should be starting up with your
system (you may have to read on how to use the ASIO device driver). It it begins to crackle and pop, then go up to 1024, but it shouldn't at this point)
Once you read your instructions, set the ASIO driver for 512 inside the software, make sure you are recording at 44/16 sample rate. Then in Ableton, Arm a track, set it for either channel one, two or wherever you see life in a channel. Hit record and see what happens. You will get some latency, but Ableton has a monitor feature, so delay should be short.
Se where that gets you, and turn off the WIFI, that is eating a lot of your resources. Right now, get your analog recording working, then you can then work on the MIDI, but that would be another forum and has its own little quirks.
Read some of the instructions and use what I have written. Let us know how it goes.