
Nick The Man
New member
??????????????????? tottaly clueless...... somethin i havent researched
You're kidding, right?Nick The Man said:??????????????????? tottaly clueless...... somethin i havent researched
MadAudio said:You're kidding, right?
Nick The Man said:i guess i was wrong in saying i was clueless i just said that so i would get a full responce
and it ended but being pretty much exactly what i thought it was
the only thing i dont understad is that you have to buy specific machines that work with pro tools
am i wrong in saying that?
Yeah, up until very recently, i had no interest in protools. Now that it is pretty damn affordable because of my soundcard, it has rekindled my interest. It's mainly the convenice factor that every studio, and every friend i know who works in a studio and has i home set up owns it. That greatly simplifies things.Hubbawho said:Yes typically you need only pro tools hardware to work with their software, however this has slightly changed just very recently. (which I'm surprised nobody mentioned yet) A few months ago the same company that owns pro tools bought out "M-audio" and has recently changed things so that now pro tools software and m-audio hardware are compatible. This is important to point out because in the past pro tools was usually very expensive.
AlexW said:For the record, the Digi 002/002R has 18 inputs that can operate simulaneously. 8 analog, 8 ADAT, and 2 S/PDIF. There are only 4 mic preamps, so maybe that's where you got confused. Also, to use the ADAT and S/PDIF inputs you need to buy additional hardware that spits out ADAT or S/PDIF signals.