@mpower88 said:
Mephisto: I agree man, 100%. I worked on windows for 3 years only because I had no money when I started up my first project studio, went to mac never look back. Despite the problems with logic from apple as the only hiccup - now it runs very well and I would never go back to a PC/Windows setup. Besides that, Macs are cool, I mean it's for me anyway so much nicer to work on a G5 with the alluminium case and a nice big cinema display than a smelly PC, they're very quiet too - and in 2 years I only lost a hard drive (right at the start) covered by apple care. The main thing for me is not having to use windows, that's the main thing, and then the reliability of Macs vs PC's is a big thing too.
Well we all make our choice. I did the opposite and went all PC a couple of years ago as Macs were too slow, too expensive and had that stupid, bloated, unreliable OS. You see, we all have different experiences..! If your PC was smelly you must have been doing something wrong. I suggest that you seek therapy for that. FWIW in a properly constructed studio you probably can't see the case, so it doesn't really matter what it's made of. Did you try putting your PC in an aluminium case so that it would look nice 'n pretty 'n all? You can also get big monitors from other manufactures than Apple, so this is another case of Apple pretending that they invented something. You want another example? Try a mouse with more than one button. Wow, what an original invention [8-)] Regarding quiet, I sent my G5 back because it sounded like an aircraft taking off, and my PC is quieter than any Mac I've ever had the misfortune to experience, in any studio. Of course now that you are all using PCs and Apple has had to admit that they've been lying about the supposed speed of their machines for years and that PCs really were faster maybe these sort of Mac vs PC nonsense posts can become a thing of the past.
The only real point of comparison is the OS; everything else is customisable on a PC, and OS is down to personal choice. All talk of cool, aluminium, quiet is just marketing bullsh*t, and you know it in your heart of hearts [:D]
Now to the serious part of the conversation. If it was possible to print meta data to an audio file, then it might make sense to be able to run MIR on the same machine (but not at the same time as your DAW). However, wouldn't that mean inventing a new sort of audio file? I don't know, but there must be only a certain amount of information that can be included in an audio file before it becomes unreadable by your application. Do you have any information on this sort of thing that you can share?
DG