@Chuck Green said:
Hi Christian,
From your response, it sound like running MIR on my existing MacPro which has the intel Xeon Processor using Bootcamp may not be a wise choice if I also plan on sequencing off the same machine. Am I understanding you correctly to say that my MacPro would run MIR (full orchestra) via Bootcamp/Windows providing I use another computer to sequence with? To say it differently, how many instruments would I be able to run in MIR using my existing MacPro and a different computer to sequence with? Would I be able to sequence the entire orchestra or would I require multiple slaves?
I don't know if I have the Intel 5000 series. My computer stats show that I have a 2 x 3 GHz Quad-Core Intel Xeon. Are we talking the same thing?
Chuck, I think that the biggest problem is that we all have different ideas of what a full orchestra is. For example, my template has around 120 Instruments, of which 60-70 will play in the larger tutti sections.
MIR is not designed to run on multiple slaves, so the computer that runs MIR has to be able to run the full template, whether the sequencer is on the same machine, or not.
Regarding your Mac, if you bought it during the last couple of months, then it uses the newer dual i7. if it was last year, it doesn't.
DG
I have been waiting for MIR quite a long time, but this has really put me off. I still can't figure out how I can run a terribly HUGE orchestral template like the ones I like to work with, included with at least 3 to 5 fx inserted on each track, and at the same time run MIR(another monster). Right now, I have two workstations exclusively for Vienna instruments. Between them, a 16GB orchestral template runs smoothly, including fx processing, as already mentioned(all through VE3). 7 altiverbs run on another machine. I was hoping that MIR could have a workstation for its own, and perhaps stream all the required data through lan, just like VE3. Well, I still haven't given up on MIR premium though.(Since it will be able to host 3rd party plugins, and other audio signals, well, who knows). fingers crossed