What Program On Mac Do You Use For Animations
Over the past few weeks we have been looking at What Apple Mac users are going to do for the next Pro Tools machine. In, Dan, Peter and Mike discussed what Mac we currently have and what our plans for the future are. I think it has to be said that the jury is out so we thought it might be helpful to extend the discussion to the whole community. In the first of series of articles and polls we would like to ask Mac users in the Pro Tools Expert community what Apple Mac are you currently using? But first, here is what we own and why. Mike Thornton - Mid 2010 Mac Pro 'Cheese-grater' I currently have a Mac Pro Cheese-grater - 2 x 2.4GHz Quad-core Intel Xeon. It is a Mid 2010 Mac Pro which I bought in December 2011 when I went HDX as my previous machine would not support HDX cards.
IOS uses parallax to give your iPhone an illusion of depth on your Home and lock screen. When it’s on, you might see a zooming animation when you open Now you can continue using that older iPhone or iPad without having to wait for the creaky hardware to catch up with all these fancy new animations.
EPub Reader for Mac – Adobe’s PDF may be the most popular document format but ePub format performs better than PDF. You can easily import ePub and PDF files from your PC to start reading. You can easily sync your last page, bookmarks, and notes so you can pick up where you left off. Epub reader for mac.
You can read my story about how I came to choose this system here in the story. So as you can see my machine already doesn't really owe me anything. Since then I have undertaken a number of upgrades. In April 2013 I added an SSD drive in this machine. I installed a Crucial M4 512GB SSD on a special Akasa SSD & HDD Adapter bracket. You can read all about it in my story.
In February 2014 I upgraded the RAM and another 8GB to bring it up to 24GB. In January 2016 I replaced the Crucial SSD drive with an Angelbird drive after I had researched the issue of the TRIM command and that in a Mac world not all SSD drives are the same.
You can read more about the research in the story and then how I went about the upgrade process in the story. In February 2016 I upgraded the RAM in my Mac Pro to bring it up to 32GB. In April 2016 I upgraded the video card which you can read about in. So all in all I have a fairly pimped Mac Pro Cheese-grater. Dan Cooper - Mid 2010 Mac Pro 'Cheese-grater' I have the same machine as Mike that I upgraded in 2013 with 32GB RAM and SSD drives. Screenshot tools for windows and mac. It's starting to show signs of ageing as I'm having problems with Wi-Fi and occasional power off problems. I know the day of replacing this machine is coming ever closer.
I know that I will not invest in this machine in terms of repair or upgrades anymore as it has certainly served me well over the last six years. Peter Barter - Late 2013 iMac 27' I am currently running a late 2013, 3.5GHz Intel Quad Core i7 iMac with 512GB SSD which I bought in mid 2014 and I’ve upgraded the RAM to 32GB since purchase. I invested quite a bit in Thunderbolt interfaces and peripherals at the same time as well so I’m currently not experiencing too many ‘bottlenecks’ with connectivity speeds etc. My only concern right now is that I’m reluctant to upgrade beyond OS X Yosemite due to compatibility with my older Adobe CS6 suite of programs – everything is currently running smoothly so no need to swallow that expensive pill just yet.
My machine currently takes everything Pro Tools can throw at it and has comfortably ran medium sized post and music sessions from external drives containing 90 - 100 tracks without skipping a beat. James Ivey - Early 2009 Mac Pro 'Cheese-grater' I am running 2 different Macs at the moment.