What kind of laptop and headset?
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  1. #1
    Tech Student
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    Default What kind of laptop and headset?

    My budget is $1500
    I have some knowledge and experience with producing music in Ableton and it will be the program Im using.
    I am only looking into getting just these two items for now. This way, I get quality equipment that will fit my current budget and it will give me time to practice my production skills. Later, when I can save more money, I plan on getting the rest of the equipment that I need such as: Midi controller, soundcard/interface, external HD, etc..


    What kind of laptop?
    Edit: So after plenty of research, Ive decided to go with Mac (Sorry PC users) it just appeals to me more, personally. So what would fit my budget and needs? Should I spend the extra cash and get a new MBP like the 13? Or should I look into getting a refurbished older MBP like the 15 or 17? I plan holding on to this laptop for quite sometime, so I want to be sure of my decision.

    What kind of headset?
    Im also gonna need a high quality headset to produce/mix with, along with with my laptop purchase. Yes I know headsets aren’t optimal for mixing. But I JUST want to get started and be able to practice.
    Im not in a stable living situation so I cant really look into getting monitors just yet. Nor do I think its really in my budget right now.

    (*Idk if it matters, but the genre of music that im producing is Electro/Trance/Club/House.. You get the idea lol.)

    Note: I already have Ableton, vst's, and drum kits covered.

    So what's your guys' opinion!? Advice, tips, suggestions, and recommendations are all greatly appreciated!

    Thank you for your time!
    Last edited by SMChills; 12-21-2011 at 05:57 PM.

  2. #2
    Tech Mentor Nicadraus's Avatar
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    Most people here would definitely suggest a MBP. But as a PC user, here's what I would suggest if you're going the PC route.

    (Dell) Alienware M14x

    -Intel® Core™ i7 2670QM 2.2GHz (3.1GHz w/Turbo Boost, 6MB Cache)
    -Genuine Windows® 7 Home Premium, 64bit,
    -8GB Dual Channel DDR3 at 1600MHz (can upgrade to 16gb later on)
    -3.0GB DDR3 NVIDIA® GeForce® GT 555M using NVIDIA Optimus™ technology
    -500GB, 7200rpm, SATA 3GB/s HD (can upgrade to SSD if you wish)

    This for $1,499.00

    Works1200 - Technics SL-1200/1210 specialist
    Dell Inspiron 14R N5437 i5 4200u, 16gb RAM/750gb 7200rpm/Win8.1
    TSP 2.6.8 + Audio 4 DJ + Kontrol X1 + Novation Dicer
    Technics SL-1200 MK3D x 3 + Ecler Nuo 4 + Pioneer DJM-250 + V-Moda M100 + Sennheiser HD280 Pro
    Alesis RA-300 + KRK ST8 + Jamo Sub200 + MGM Studio HT-3D 8" powered sub

  3. #3
    Tech Guru Otacon's Avatar
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    Im personally a PC man and love it, but allotttttt of DJs are using macs these days. I dont know the pros and cons, i just know it comes down to preference. As far a headphones go, If you eventually wanna DJ find a pair that fold. Dont get me wrong, there are some amazing headphones that dont fold like the TMA-1's and such, i just prefer the ones that fold when putting them in a bag or case.

  4. #4
    Tech Guru deevey's Avatar
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    Well I'd personally go with a Low end Macbook pro 13' refurb - prob round the $900 mark.

    or

    Similar Spec Lenovo Laptop (around $500) if you don't mind tinkering with your config to get the most out of windows.

    The "Money's worth" factor alone for me makes buying a Mac a no-brainer for me, coupled with the reliability, resale value, plus the amount of time I gain by not needing to tinker with the OS, everything just works period.

    A controller of some description... I would highly recommend an APC40 if you can.

    Sony MDR-V6 Headphones.

    NI Audio 2 Soundcard

    (Dell) Alienware M14x
    The Alienware's are a complete waste of money unless you are a Gamer or doing Video/3d rendering, its a Dell, nuff said

  5. #5
    Tech Guru mostapha's Avatar
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    PCs are worthless excuses for garbage. (jk…kinda…okay, not really)

    The bottom-end 13"MBP will run most any production software you want. I'd just get the base model and be done with it for a while. You can upgrade the RAM later if you find a need, but you probably won't. A lot of stuff isn't running stably in 64-bit modes yet, which means that having more than 4GB of ram is literally pointless. IDK whether Ableton has that problem or not, look it up. I run Logic, Maschine, Traktor, and various soft synths on mine (early 2011 13" MBP with an SSD and no other upgrades) and it takes everything I throw at it with no tweaks or abnormal maintenance…except Flash. Flash is the one thing Windows can do well.

    As for longevity…my old computer was an early 2008 black Macbook. I got the new one because my blackbook was going to go out of warranty and I had the money. The old one is fine and still runs Traktor. I see no reason it wouldn't run Live now when it did a year ago. I put a new drive in it and gave it to my GF for christmas last weekend, and she seems to love it. So, now it's out of warranty and no longer mine, but everything is running great except for the battery, which probably needs to be replaced after sitting around unused for like 8 months.

    That laptop outlasted any of my previous PC laptops by a wide margin. I'm pretty sure that Apple only offers 3-year warranties so people like me will buy computers more often.

    Anyway, if you can deal with the reduced storage space, an SSD is the best performance upgrade that you can make for a laptop, by far. As long as it's a good one. The ones Apple sells don't count: they're overpriced and out of date. Look at Other World Computing (macsales.com) and see if you can get one of their Mercury drives (OCZ is another good option). You want the 6GBit versions. I have a Mercurty ExtremePro 6G, and it's absolutely stunning. I tend to think that something's wrong with every other computer I use. It might be over your budget at first, but do it at some point…you won't look back.

    And don't even think about doing anything on a computer without a reliable backup. 2TB drives are like $100 now if you can deal with USB, which is fine for backups (though insanely slow for the first one and unusable for anything disk-intensive…seriously, IDK how PC users deal with it). Buy 2 of them. Set up Time Machine and swap the drives out every week with one of them stored somewhere other than your home. I haven't had a drive crash in a long time, but I haven't lost data since I was 15.

    For headphones…I'd recommend the MDR-V6. They're the same as the MDR-7506, a studio standard for years, very flat, decent stereo imaging, and pretty robust/reliable. They're the best you're going to get on a budget, and they're like $60.

    And if you can deal with not having a laptop…iMacs give you a bit more bang for your buck…mostly a quad-core processor instead of dual-core and a bigger screen. Everything else still applies the same, and yes…I'd immediately drop an SSD in an iMac if I got one.

    And you don't need a sound card to start out. You won't get noticeably better audio than the cards that come with Apple computers until you're spending several hundred dollars on the sound card. Nothing NI makes sounds noticeably better to my ears…they just have more channels.
    Last edited by mostapha; 12-22-2011 at 10:16 AM.

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