But this last iOS 8 update shows that 16GB is not enough, and Apple really needs to address this by discontinuing that model of the iPad and iPhone. Jul 03, 2012 There are a vast number of powerful music-making apps available for the new iPad, but if you’re interested in creating tunes with this ubiquitous touch device, one app that’s really worth checking out is the iOS version of GarageBand by Apple. The same company that’s responsible for the Macintosh, iPod, iPhone and iPad has put its energy into creating a mobile music production app,. Mar 14, 2011 Bear in mind that 16GB model = 14GB real world storage. Also bear in mind that you can stream all of your media to an iPad, so as long as you're in range of your home network you don't need onboard storage and 16GB is enough for a load of apps. You only really need more than 16GB if you want to have access to a fair bit of media while on the move. Mar 08, 2012 Still, Apple is getting you to pay $100 for an extra 16GB of storage and $200 for an extra 48GB of storage. That's not a great deal, given what SD cards go for these days. That's probably where Apple helps increase their margins. So if giving Apple an extra dime irks you, the 16GB baseline model could be the way to go. Nov 01, 2012 The iPad mini is mostly a device aimed at people who are making it their first tablet. If you’ve got a full-sized iPad, the larger, clearer display is going to be better in most circumstances for browsing the web, playing games, reading books and comics, typing, word processing, editing photos.
Hello everybody and greetings from Germany,
I´ve been wondering if the 2013 Macbook Air 13' i5 is powerful enough for some hobby music production with Garageband once in a while. I record vocals, guitars and a few other instruments. My first mac ever was the low end 2012 Macbook Pro 13' that I upgraded to 16 GB of Ram. With that computer Garageband was usable but I experienced a few lags once in a while. Also one or two crashes occurred. Even though I could easily restore these files it was annoying and I wasn´t expecting that from apple. Due to some life changes I sold the macbook pro and bought the 2012 iMac 21,5' with 8GB of Ram, i5 and 1 TB fusion drive. I absolutely fell in love with this machine and Garageband works absolutely flawless, maybe because of the quad core processor? I´ve been owning the iMac for almost a year but now I´m facing another new situation in life where I need a portable computing device. So time has come to sell the iMac and get a macbook. The macbook equivalent to my current iMac would be the 15' Macbook Pro Retina but because I´ll be traveling a lot I don´t want to carry around a 2000€ device. Also the 15' would be too heavy and big. A 13' version that comes close to the iMac in terms of power and capacity would be the 13' Macbook Pro Retina with 512GB SSD, 8GB or even 16GB of Ram and the i7 processor. Again, I don´t want to carry around a 2000€ device.
So now I wonder if a Macbook Air 13' would suit my needs if I just took the 256GB SSD Model with 8GB of ram and i5 processor. I would get an external hard drive so I´d be okay with the 256GB. I usually just browse the web, check emails but also play a few old (!) games on a windows partition and record some music once in a while.
What do you think? Is the Macbook Air powerful enough for those needs or would I be struggling with some tasks? I hope you can help me decide.
Best regards,
Patrick.
I´ve been wondering if the 2013 Macbook Air 13' i5 is powerful enough for some hobby music production with Garageband once in a while. I record vocals, guitars and a few other instruments. My first mac ever was the low end 2012 Macbook Pro 13' that I upgraded to 16 GB of Ram. With that computer Garageband was usable but I experienced a few lags once in a while. Also one or two crashes occurred. Even though I could easily restore these files it was annoying and I wasn´t expecting that from apple. Due to some life changes I sold the macbook pro and bought the 2012 iMac 21,5' with 8GB of Ram, i5 and 1 TB fusion drive. I absolutely fell in love with this machine and Garageband works absolutely flawless, maybe because of the quad core processor? I´ve been owning the iMac for almost a year but now I´m facing another new situation in life where I need a portable computing device. So time has come to sell the iMac and get a macbook. The macbook equivalent to my current iMac would be the 15' Macbook Pro Retina but because I´ll be traveling a lot I don´t want to carry around a 2000€ device. Also the 15' would be too heavy and big. A 13' version that comes close to the iMac in terms of power and capacity would be the 13' Macbook Pro Retina with 512GB SSD, 8GB or even 16GB of Ram and the i7 processor. Again, I don´t want to carry around a 2000€ device.
So now I wonder if a Macbook Air 13' would suit my needs if I just took the 256GB SSD Model with 8GB of ram and i5 processor. I would get an external hard drive so I´d be okay with the 256GB. I usually just browse the web, check emails but also play a few old (!) games on a windows partition and record some music once in a while.
What do you think? Is the Macbook Air powerful enough for those needs or would I be struggling with some tasks? I hope you can help me decide.
Best regards,
Patrick.
![Is 16gb ipad enough for garageband 4 Is 16gb ipad enough for garageband 4](/uploads/1/2/6/0/126022133/523174350.jpg)
![Garageband Garageband](/uploads/1/2/6/0/126022133/674549687.jpg)
Is 16gb Enough Storage
- Asked by fn
Is 16gb Enough Iphone
@th3irdeye said:
I pretty much have my app ecosystem in place where there isn't anything I'd want to do that one of the couple pages of apps I have wouldn't accomplish the task and I have one or two of the bigger 'retina' games (Infinity Blade II, etc.), I stream all of my music/video content, and any documents or extra things I don't need to access that often are stored in Dropbox. Currently have 9.9 GB free on my 16 GB 3rd gen. That being said you will probably go a bit crazy when you first get it and download ALL the free apps. I know I did when I first got my iPad 2. But you'll find that you don't need/use a lot of them and they are just wasting space. And anything you purchased can be re-downloaded later so it's no big deal if you delete it. In my opinion 16 GB is enough if you know how to work out of the cloud and don't get too greedy.
Cool cool. I'm already in the App Ecosystem through my iPhone and I was planning on mostly relying on music & video in the cloud anyway (Spotify & Netflix FTW).
Apple Ipad 16gb
@mark_uses_parentheses: Cheers.