03-26 Hey kids... stop all the downloadin'
After a while saving some cash and struggling on my old circa-'99 machine, I finally built a new music computer. This time, instead of going to a computer show and grabbing all the cheapest white-box parts I could, I went to NewEgg and the local Micro Center and "splurged" on some brand names and good quality parts. What'd I get?
I decided to wait out the purchase of Cubase 4, considering it costs quite a bit of money and I am just now entering the world of actually spending money on music software. And with the total dearth of time to work on tracks lately, $100 versus $400 seemed like a worthwhile sacrifice for a while.
All that in a weekend -- along with a roller derby match (Erika's team, the D-Funk All Stars, crushed the Devil's Night Dames), finally re-tiling the entry way, lots of house cleaning, and even some Emurse stuff.
- an Intel "Conroe" 2.13Ghz dual-core processor
- a crazy Rosewill heatsink/cooling device
- a Gigabyte motherboard with onboard video (I'm not a fancy vid card kinda guy)
- 2GB of 800Mhz DDR RAM
- a Western Digital 160GB SATA hard drive (in this case I did go cheaper, Seagate was $20 more)
- an Ultra steel case with a classy flip-open front bezel
I decided to wait out the purchase of Cubase 4, considering it costs quite a bit of money and I am just now entering the world of actually spending money on music software. And with the total dearth of time to work on tracks lately, $100 versus $400 seemed like a worthwhile sacrifice for a while.
All that in a weekend -- along with a roller derby match (Erika's team, the D-Funk All Stars, crushed the Devil's Night Dames), finally re-tiling the entry way, lots of house cleaning, and even some Emurse stuff.
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