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Does My Laptop Meet The Requirements of Cakewalk?


1.Y.6.

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Hey, everyone!

 

I'm a new & aspiring music artist here. I just want to know if I can use Cakewalk in my laptop for the long-run. 

 

Here are my laptop's specifications:

 

OS Name :  Microsoft Windows 10 Pro N, 64-Bit

Storage : 1 Terabyte HDD (930.97 GB To Be Exact, Has 806.3 GB Left)

RAM: 8.00 GB

Processor: Intel(R) Core i3-2350M CPU @ 2.30 GHz, 2 Core(s), 4 Logical Processor(s)

Graphics Card: Intel(R) HD Graphics 3000 GPU

 

Thanks in advance everyone!

Edited by 1.Y.6.
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Welcome to the forum. 
Quite simply yes. Your laptop should be OK. 

However, there is a limit to the audio data you can process and the number of individual tracks you can record. Limited by the interactions between your laptops CPU speed, memory, speed of your drives and what is creating the sounds you want to record and playback.  
 

You didn’t mention what you were going to record and whether you need microphone/s, guitar etc. The type of inputs will dictate which external audio device you’ll need if any. 
 

If its purely electronic sounds generated by the software in your laptop then another consideration will be how you will hear your recordings. Earphones/buds or external speakers. Again your choice of external audio device (read Sound/Audio Card) will play a part in those choices too. 
 

When you say in the long run - Cakewalk, while it is distributed under a free license now, has a history dating back more than 30 years. It is a mature Digital Audio Workstation (DAW) that has a bright future with a team of dedicated developers some of whom have spent 20+ years writing the code. 
 

This forum is a unique extra as the community is involved and passionate, including many professional musicians, composers and producers. Willingly helping. 
 

Add to that I’ve not known a forum to have so much input from the developers. While it should never be expected or taken for granted, they make an enormous direct contribution when a particular question calls for their input. Also responsive to direct feature requests and a robust bug reporting system. 
 

That’s about it. You’ll have more questions and you’re always welcome to post them here at anytime, I highly recommend you familiarise yourself with the Cakewalk Resource Guide (see links higher up in the forum) and simply hovering over an icon in any Cakewalk screen will show a tool tip and if the online help is enabled you’ll get that info right in whichever window you’re in. 
 

All the best. 

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I had similar specs to that on my previous laptop and was able to do reasonably large productions on it, but it wasn't fun. And it definitely benefitted from having an SSD rather than a spinning hard drive, like you have. The moment you start getting the audio track counts up (if you plan to do audio work rather than MIDI) you're going to run out of steam pretty fast.

8 gig of RAM is very slim. You'll need to get used to freezing off effects tracks and synths so it plays everything.

It's doable, but not a great experience, honestly.

But like Mike said, asking questions here or dropping into the Tutorials section will give you a good idea of what's possible for how you plan to use it.

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On 11/10/2022 at 1:03 AM, 1.Y.6. said:

I'm a new & aspiring music artist here. I just want to know if I can use Cakewalk in my laptop for the long-run.

As others have alluded to, it very much matters what type and how many tracks you anticipate using.

It should work fine for "new & aspiring," but you may outgrow it as you try to do more with it. How quickly that happens depends on what type of material you're creating. As you learn more, you'll probably want to do more, and you'll eventually want a more powerful system, but there's no harm in starting out with this one.

Swapping the HDD for an SSD and stuffing in as much RAM as it will take are inexpensive upgrades that will have great payoffs in performance for the whole system, and when you upgrade to a more powerful system, you can take the SSD with you.

If you want to record audio, you'll need an external interface with mic inputs.

The things that tax a system these days are plug-ins, either FX or virtual instruments, so it really matters how many and how resource-hungry the ones you'll use are.

I can do a decent level of audio production on the system where I'm typing this, which is my kinda elderly Dell Latitude notebook with 8G of RAM (maxed out). But it is getting to the point where a  couple of the plug-ins I use on my main system won't run on this one due to its lacking later versions of the AVX instruction set. Doesn't make it unusable, but it means that I have to watch it.

Whatever system you use, it's always a good idea to optimize it for use with audio. There are several threads on this forum with suggestions for how to do it.

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