It is nice to think that one could just go and buy any computer, install a
bit of software on it and start using it to record and create music. This
idea isn't necessarily wrong, but there are some important details that it
- misses. Any computer that that can be bought today (since somewhere around
+ misses. Any computer that can be bought today (since somewhere around
the end of 2012) is capable of recording and processing a lot of audio data.
It will come with a builtin audio interface that can accept inputs from
microphones and/or electrical instruments; it will have a disk with a huge
massively reduces the rate at which data can be read from the disk. Avoid
this.</td></tr>
</table>
+
<p>
Richard Ames presents a long (28
minute) <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GUsLLEkswzE">video</a>
that is very helpful if you want to understand these issues in more
- depth. It is a little bit Windows-centric, but the explanations to
+ depth. It is a little bit Windows-centric, but the explanations apply to
all types of computers and operating systems.
</p>
+