Dane,

thanks for a most informative post.  SOmething I have been
interested in for years now. Sadly, My Mac Mini, which has been
on the shelf probably for too long, is the model before the one
of which you speak so eloquently.

Cheers, and have a good day.

Joe
On Sun, 13 Nov 2016 10:25:45 +1100
Dane Trethowan <[email protected]> wrote:

Hi!

I've been prompted to write something on this topic due to the number of 
private emails I've received over the last couple of hours, we've been 
discussing Exact Audio Copy and CD rippers and it seems that my mention of the 
Mac and XLD has stimulated some interest so here goes.

I'm going to discuss the Mac from an audio viewpoint as much as is possible 
here.

So what Mac should you buy? Well obviously that's up to you but I warn you now! 
a Mac is going to cut deeply into your budget if you're after the latest and - 
when it comes to audio - the latest may not always be the best and you'll see 
why I say this as you read on.

So the latest Mac is expensive thus a great turnoff for anyone wanting to buy 
one but who said you had to have the latest Mac? You don't and who said you 
needed a Mac with its own built-in screen? Well, you don't but it is advisable 
that you have a Mac connected to some sort of modern day monitor at the very 
least for the Mac to function correctly so this narrows our field down quite 
considerably to the Mac Mini.

I've never been a fan of the latest Mac Mini models as the Specs aren't all 
that good for the technology you pay for so let's take ourselves back in time 
exactly fours to late 2012 when Apple released possibly the finest Mac Mini 
machine ever built though -given the quality of build and the high specs of the 
late 2012 Mac Mini you'll pay a bit of a price for one if you can still get one 
-.

These machines featured an Intel I7 Quad Core Processor in the top model with 
16GB of RAM.

The Late 2012 Mac Mini was the last to boast separate analogue/digital audio in 
and out, the latter models now having one socket for both, an absolute pain in 
the but.

4 USB 3.0 ports are a welcome addition along with the Thunderbolt port which 
can be used for just about everything from a display to extra USB ports, sound 
devices, high performance hard drives and so on.

I like the built-in HDMI port so - given its size - the Mac Mini could be a 
very welcome edition to a Home Theater/multi media setup.

Going wireless is part and parcel of the Mac mini with its 2.4/5.0GHZ built-in 
Wi-Fi and Bluetooth 4.1 connectivity.

Storage isn't a problem here either and nor is performance with the 1.2TB 
fusion drive packed into the metal housing and - with all those USB and other 
ports? - Well adding hard drives is second nature.

The lack of a DVD drive might be a nuisance to some but what are all those uSB 
ports for if you an't gonna use em? Might as well get an external DVD drive, 
place it on top of your Mac Mini and plug-in.

I run both Mac OSX Sierra and Windows 10 on my Mac Mini thanks to VMware Fusion.

So why do I really like the Mac for audio work? Because its far easier to 
separate and work with all your audio sources, you don't have the conflicts 
between say software speech and capturing streams on the Mac as you often 
encounter when recording with Windows but I'm not going to turn this post into 
a complicated ramble.

I've pasted a link to a review of the late 2012 Mac Mini below. Your local 
Apple Store may know where you can get one of these particular machines, 
thankfully I knew someone who had one which had hardly ever been used so I 
snapped it up some time ago and I know a couple of other people who have found 
them on eBay but as time goes on they're becoming a little more difficult to 
find and the price is going up.

http://au.pcmag.com/apple-mac-mini-late-2012/5809/review/apple-mac-mini-late-2012



-- 
**********
“Oh, I’m an activist and I’m OK / I sleep all night and I tweet all day.”


-- 
Joe Paton <[email protected]>


Reply via email to