@kleinholgi said:
I think "overkill mode" is the right statement here .)
The question for me would be if you do this as your core business (film/score...) on a professional basis where you need 100% performance, stability and backup security. At the same time can you profit from expenditures speaking of tax deductions and stuff like that ?
Also, how many performance heavy instruments do you plan to use at the same time ?
i mean, we still speak about music production, not NASA´s mission to Mars. In our company we have some computers running heavy duty simulation tasks (Synopsis and stuff like that). Even they run with non ECC RAM out of the box.
If you care for stability, I´d buy a good motherboard with excellent cooling, and wouldn´t overclock the system, even if you loose a few % of possible performance.
Thanks for your feedback, kleinholgi. I'm a composer, but -- these days -- not for commercial applications like film/TV or ads. However, I do make my living as a music instructor and music consultant and can therefore write everything off as an expense. I've been using GigaStudio, Cubase, and Vienna samples on an ordinary, consumer-level PC for years, and - now that I'm moving up to a Windows 7 machine and VI - I would really like to leave the glitches, crashes, CPU- and RAM- congestion behind! Although I usually write for smaller orchestral ensembles, I would like to have the option of using the complete orchestra - along with as many non-orchestral instruments I may decide to include -- with as many articulations as I have/would like to use -- and as with as much processing as I can learn to do properly.
Some of my peers have said 16GB RAM on a regular machine will suffice, while others have advised to "get as much RAM as you can afford!". From what I've been learning (and my knowledge of this stuff is very basic), the only way to get more RAM is via a server board. While I can't afford a $5000 machine, I'm willing to spend more than the cost of a typical consumer machine if it will mean fewer hassles and happier computer composing.
Toward that end, I'd welcome any feedback, including motherboard, CPU, and RAM types/models/amounts.
Thanks!