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		 (07-26-2019, 10:08 PM)wizkies Wrote:  I wonder where can i get the coupon The coupon will be sent to you via e-mail after you enter your forum credentials on the preorder page . Only forum accounts that were created before 1st July are eligible.
	 
	
	
		 (07-26-2019, 11:51 PM)hdk Wrote:  I'm a desperate "just after july 1" member.It would be bodacious if I could order the Pinebook Pro now; for the manufacturer's longer term planning and for my state of mind.
 Or do I not exist without a coupon?
 
Don't worry about it. I'm still waiting for my coupon. The first batch won't even have the ANSI keyboard, so don't consider these preorders to be a proper release of the laptop.
	 
	
	
		 (07-27-2019, 05:04 AM)DoMiNeLa10 Wrote:  so don't consider these preorders to be a proper release of the laptop. 
Such kind words for the staff that worked hard to make the Pinebook Pro a reality...
	 
	
	
		 (07-26-2019, 08:59 PM)binarian Wrote:   (07-18-2019, 07:12 AM)mamboman777 Wrote:  Greetings! I'm planning on purchasing a PBP.  I would like to use it as a daily work machine for email and web browsing, but I'm curious if it may be usable for my side gig.  I am a recording engineer.  I would need it to run jack+ardour to record up to 16 track simultaneously @ 44.1k. Does anyone see any reason this won't work? The storage world be a concern. I would probably place sessions and tracks on USB drives. Audio recording in and of itself isn't a cpu-heavy task, so while the PBP doesn't have a ton of horsepower it will probably handle that alright.  Make sure your storage device can handle the throughput though.
 
 Doing editing, however, is not something I would recommend.
 
Editing, or even any plugins at all is not part of the plan.  I just want to write to disk.  Everything else would be done at home on a different machine.  
 
Are there throughput limitations for the PBP usb?  Focusrite gear all runs on USB 2.0, so I would probably consider using the USB 3 port on the pbp for the storage. I have recorded stuff like this to an sd card before, so I'm hoping there's not going to be much of a problem.
	 
	
	
		Just confirming if the power supplies for the pinebook pro will be "switching"?  I'm wanting to order for use in Australia. Currently I see USA and EU adapters only. Can I simply order either USA or EU and use a travel adapter or will you be offering other connections (e.g. AU).
 Many thanks
 
	
	
		 (07-28-2019, 06:47 AM)cocozozo Wrote:  Just confirming if the power supplies for the pinebook pro will be "switching"?  I'm wanting to order for use in Australia. Currently I see USA and EU adapters only. Can I simply order either USA or EU and use a travel adapter or will you be offering other connections (e.g. AU).
 Many thanks
 
Yes, all the power adapters can run on any line voltage. There also is a AU plug available with this one: https://store.pine64.org/?product=rock64...uk-us-plug 
Community administrator and sysadmin for PINE64(Translation: If something breaks on the website, forum, or chat network, I'm a good person to yell at about it)
 
 
 
	
		
		
		07-29-2019, 07:23 AM 
(This post was last modified: 07-30-2019, 04:37 AM by cocozozo.)
		
	 
		 (07-28-2019, 08:05 AM)fire219 Wrote:   (07-28-2019, 06:47 AM)cocozozo Wrote:  Just confirming if the power supplies for the pinebook pro will be "switching"?  I'm wanting to order for use in Australia. Currently I see USA and EU adapters only. Can I simply order either USA or EU and use a travel adapter or will you be offering other connections (e.g. AU).
 Many thanks
 Yes, all the power adapters can run on any line voltage. There also is a AU plug available with this one: https://store.pine64.org/?product=rock64...uk-us-plug
 
Ok thats fantastic.
 
Cheers    
	
	
		 (07-27-2019, 03:23 PM)mamboman777 Wrote:   (07-26-2019, 08:59 PM)binarian Wrote:   (07-18-2019, 07:12 AM)mamboman777 Wrote:  Greetings! I'm planning on purchasing a PBP.  I would like to use it as a daily work machine for email and web browsing, but I'm curious if it may be usable for my side gig.  I am a recording engineer.  I would need it to run jack+ardour to record up to 16 track simultaneously @ 44.1k. Does anyone see any reason this won't work? The storage world be a concern. I would probably place sessions and tracks on USB drives. Audio recording in and of itself isn't a cpu-heavy task, so while the PBP doesn't have a ton of horsepower it will probably handle that alright.  Make sure your storage device can handle the throughput though.
 
 Doing editing, however, is not something I would recommend.
 Editing, or even any plugins at all is not part of the plan.  I just want to write to disk.  Everything else would be done at home on a different machine.
 
 Are there throughput limitations for the PBP usb?  Focusrite gear all runs on USB 2.0, so I would probably consider using the USB 3 port on the pbp for the storage. I have recorded stuff like this to an sd card before, so I'm hoping there's not going to be much of a problem.
 
I would not expect any issues then.  AFAIK the only throughput "limitations" on the PBP is the fact that the camera/mic are USB (and I assume the keyboard/trackpad are too), but those are inconsequential.  If I did my math right, 16 channels of 48k 24bit audio is only 18Mbps, and standard USB2 spec supports a theoretical max of 480 Mbps, so you're well within range.  I didn't know if an SD card would support that, but certainly any hard drive should, let alone eMMC or SSD
	 
	
	
		 (07-29-2019, 01:48 PM)binarian Wrote:   (07-27-2019, 03:23 PM)mamboman777 Wrote:   (07-26-2019, 08:59 PM)binarian Wrote:   (07-18-2019, 07:12 AM)mamboman777 Wrote:  Greetings! I'm planning on purchasing a PBP.  I would like to use it as a daily work machine for email and web browsing, but I'm curious if it may be usable for my side gig.  I am a recording engineer.  I would need it to run jack+ardour to record up to 16 track simultaneously @ 44.1k. Does anyone see any reason this won't work? The storage world be a concern. I would probably place sessions and tracks on USB drives. Audio recording in and of itself isn't a cpu-heavy task, so while the PBP doesn't have a ton of horsepower it will probably handle that alright.  Make sure your storage device can handle the throughput though.
 
 Doing editing, however, is not something I would recommend.
 Editing, or even any plugins at all is not part of the plan.  I just want to write to disk.  Everything else would be done at home on a different machine.
 
 Are there throughput limitations for the PBP usb?  Focusrite gear all runs on USB 2.0, so I would probably consider using the USB 3 port on the pbp for the storage. I have recorded stuff like this to an sd card before, so I'm hoping there's not going to be much of a problem.
 I would not expect any issues then.  AFAIK the only throughput "limitations" on the PBP is the fact that the camera/mic are USB (and I assume the keyboard/trackpad are too), but those are inconsequential.  If I did my math right, 16 channels of 48k 24bit audio is only 18Mbps, and standard USB2 spec supports a theoretical max of 480 Mbps, so you're well within range.  I didn't know if an SD card would support that, but certainly any hard drive should, let alone eMMC or SSD
 
A class 10 (10 MB/s) SD card should be able to handle that. One word of caution, once an SD card gets too fragmented, performance can drop significantly.
https://www.sdcard.org/developers/overview/speed_class/ 
	
		
		
		07-29-2019, 06:08 PM 
(This post was last modified: 07-29-2019, 06:09 PM by mamboman777.)
		
	 
		 (07-29-2019, 03:15 PM)jiyong Wrote:   (07-29-2019, 01:48 PM)binarian Wrote:   (07-27-2019, 03:23 PM)mamboman777 Wrote:   (07-26-2019, 08:59 PM)binarian Wrote:   (07-18-2019, 07:12 AM)mamboman777 Wrote:  Greetings! I'm planning on purchasing a PBP.  I would like to use it as a daily work machine for email and web browsing, but I'm curious if it may be usable for my side gig.  I am a recording engineer.  I would need it to run jack+ardour to record up to 16 track simultaneously @ 44.1k. Does anyone see any reason this won't work? The storage world be a concern. I would probably place sessions and tracks on USB drives. Audio recording in and of itself isn't a cpu-heavy task, so while the PBP doesn't have a ton of horsepower it will probably handle that alright.  Make sure your storage device can handle the throughput though.
 
 Doing editing, however, is not something I would recommend.
 Editing, or even any plugins at all is not part of the plan.  I just want to write to disk.  Everything else would be done at home on a different machine.
 
 Are there throughput limitations for the PBP usb?  Focusrite gear all runs on USB 2.0, so I would probably consider using the USB 3 port on the pbp for the storage. I have recorded stuff like this to an sd card before, so I'm hoping there's not going to be much of a problem.
 I would not expect any issues then.  AFAIK the only throughput "limitations" on the PBP is the fact that the camera/mic are USB (and I assume the keyboard/trackpad are too), but those are inconsequential.  If I did my math right, 16 channels of 48k 24bit audio is only 18Mbps, and standard USB2 spec supports a theoretical max of 480 Mbps, so you're well within range.  I didn't know if an SD card would support that, but certainly any hard drive should, let alone eMMC or SSD
 A class 10 (10 MB/s) SD card should be able to handle that. One word of caution, once an SD card gets too fragmented, performance can drop significantly.
 https://www.sdcard.org/developers/overview/speed_class/
 
I've experienced that. I've also moved away from SD cards. I'm planning on putting my sessions on external USB drives or nvme. 
 
I bet your math is correct on the io.  Probably why Focusrite doesn't bother with usb 3.0 compatibility. For those interested: https://support.focusrite.com/hc/en-gb/a...vs-USB-3-0 |