On Wed, 13 Dec 2017, Will Godfrey wrote:
I'm thinking of getting a new 'pooter for
music, and also thinking of making
it one of the new Ryzen ones. I don't think there is much point in going for
more than quad core. The 1500X looks like a good bet 3.5 to 3.7G, and not
overly expensive.
My choice is i5 with 4 cores no hyperthread... no video problems... but
then I don't do video editing or games. Video viewing has been just fine.
On (say) an asus motherboard with on-board radeon
graphics. I'm not really
I went with asus as well. There were about 20 MB that would fit the CPU
choice. I wanted maximum pci slots (ice1712 and AudipPCI card for MIDI)
and was able to find a few with 3 pci slots. I chose midrange, high enough
to take extra memory and have fast sata, but leave out as many bells and
whistles as I could because those just clog up ones irqs. This one was
able to do either old or new style bios and allows turning boost and/or
onboard audio off.
The one think I've no idea about is the sound
card. I've got a positively
ancient 2496 that survived 3 PCs so far, but I think it's time for an upgrade.
Anyone any ideas about a well supported PCI-e oneĀ· It would be nice to have
balanced IO for a start!
As an almost direct replacement for the 2496 my first thought was the
Juli@ XTe which has balanced io.
http://www.esi-audio.com/products/juliaxte/
However, it is no longer made, ESI now sells the MAYA44 eX. This does not
have balanced io, but rather 1/4in stereo. Also, Juli@ says there are
ALSA drivers, but the maya does not.
From there you go to RME, AudioScience, Lynx and
digigram. So far as I
know, AudioScience has full Linux compatability (including
programmers
API), Digigram has ALSA drivers for some of their devices but not all,
Lynx might be none and RME Linux support seems to have gone downhill.
However, I would suggest asking on the rivendell list/forum/whatever for
more info. (They suggest AudioScience right off the top)
Personally, I think when I replace my D66 (probably when I can't get a MB
with PCI) I have been thinking of the AudioScience PCIe cards as one of
the possibilities. (in the USB world... probably MOTU AVB with the thought
of figuring out AVB on Linux)
Personally, I have not needed more than the 6 inputs I have... in fact I
don't think I have even used more than 2 and most often use 1. So having
room for a drumset and needing more inputs may be another reason to
upgrade.
--
Len Ovens
www.ovenwerks.net