#Turbo tax for mac vs windows 2018 how to
So my strategy is - postpone it as long as I can so when it messes up after update there is advice how to solve it.Īlso you can buy powerful hardware a lot cheaper.Īgreed, especially with the bolded part. You can't easily disable it in home edition and maybe I just not lucky, but every major update I had problems with it - the latest one created some new disk partition and spammed me every few mins that it is almost full, so I had to google how to hide it in command line. Only problem I see when using windows for everything, not only music production but also gaming etc is that MS forces you to update. It is stable and fast ( when using SSD of course). Reemo wrote:I don't see any downside when using windows 10 for music production. Which I barely use, but still need sometimes. Right now I have to stick with El Capitan because if I upgrade to High Sierra, it will cost me around 500$ to update Cubase and ProTools. Just a budget thing, I'm also tired of a new OS every year, I think it's too much. Of course I had SSD'sĭespite this bad experience, I still think that my next computer will be a PC. The experience was painful, we had a lot of disk streaming problems during shows, at one point, Live was playing a single stereo file, and the audio stopped ( the 'D' at top right was flashing orange), I never knew why it couldn't play a stereo file. I would trade it with the newest touchbar MBP anytime, because of the improvements on the video card performance, and hard drive speed.Īs for windows, back in 2016 I built a redundant computer setup using 2 sweetwater computers. I just scored a movie on it, and the video was jerky, even on an empty project. I was very dissapointed with the video card. Else I would have got an ASUS gaming computer for 1/2 the price of an MBP. I went through the same thoughts, 2 1/2 years ago, and stayed with Mac because all my co workers were on MAC.