On Thu, 17 Dec 2015, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
ASAP I need to buy a new mobo, so most likely a new
CPU and RAM too.
It must be cheap and provide PCIe for audio and PCI for at least one
additional sound card used for MIDI. In the low cost price range my
favored dealer seems to provide ASRock, ASUS and Gigabyte that fulfill
these requirements. Is one of those vendors known to be better or less
good in the low price range than the others or is it better to chose
another vendor?
I've had nothing but good luck with Asus for years. Their Linux and BSD
compatibility is excellent, and they're always fast boards.
As far as an additional sound card for Midi (I assume this means in
addition to whatever card you're recording with), I wouldn't really
bother. Typically all motherboards these days have decent desktop audio
integrated into the board, and you can cheaply get Midi from a USB
interface from Edirol or M-Audio or such. The days of getting Midi
through your Soundblaster's game port are long over.
Regarding issues old AMD CPUs relatively often had
with new rt
kernels, I suspect an Intel CPU could be the better choice. Are there
any of the cheaper AMD or Intel CPUs known to cause issues for audio
and MIDI work, resp. known to work flawlessly?
I've used nothing but AMD CPU's for a decade or so, and I've never had
any RT problems, at least not once they got things worked out in the
standard Linus kernel the way they are now. I normally just use the
latest stable from
kernel.org, and it works fine without patches on an
AMD CPU.
Is there something to consider regarding UEFI? I
don't need it and I
wonder if it could be disabled for all new mobos.
Standard PC BIOS is dead. Any new motherboard will have UEFI.
--
- Brent Busby + ===============================================
+ "With the rise of social networking
-- Keycorner -- + sites, computers are making people
-- Recording -- + easier to use every day."
----------------+ ===============================================