MOTU MachFive 2 Virtual Instrument (Standard)

MOTU MachFive 2 Virtual Instrument (Standard)


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Thursday, October 13, 2011

Tahiti - A Different Tempo

Tahiti - A Different Tempo


Rarely life present us with such deliciously difficult decisions. And after months of planning hecticwedding, these are the only types of decisions that will make you and your husband is new. For a honeymoon that is truly sublime, to the north-east towards the equator to Tahiti and its 118 islands.

Mainly on five scattered archipelagos and over four million square miles of ocean, the bride had the enviable task of sampling this corner of SouthThe Pacific. After a week in this land of hot, tropical climate, rich culture and good Food, we know why there is a popular honeymoon destination.

Gateway to the archipelago

As our plane landed Air Tahiti Nui to Papeete, the capital of Tahiti, developed a collective gasp

through the cabin. Emerging from the emerald sea are cloud-draped mountains, plunging valleys and pristine beaches seem endless. And if the beauty ofLandscape is not sufficient to accommodate the warmth of the locals.

Tahiti is known for the hospitality of its inhabitants. On arrival at our hotel, the InterContinental Resort Tahiti, we are greeted with songs and sounds of the guitar and ukulele. Smiling Polynesian woMen in traditional Dress entertain us with traditional dances and we end with garlands of flowers painted with the national flower of Tahiti, the Tiare.

A great place to start your stay offers Tahiti, Tahitivisitors numerous treasures including a bustling market where you will discover multi-coloured pareos (sarongs), local handcrafts and luscious vanilla soaps and lotions.

During our stay, the sun rarely leaves the sky and the breeze barely rouses the flat crystal waters. While this is a typical day for this part of the world - the temperature varies between 26 and 28 degrees all year round - our guide warns us of the occasional bout of tropical rain. However, all is not lost if it does rain as there are scores of art and history museums waiting to be explored. Particularly worth a visit is the Paul Gauguin Museum. Located in a spacious garden, the museum is a memorial to the artist famed for his portrayal of island life.

If your idea of a honeymoon involves activity and adventure, you will be hard pressed to find a more extreme excursion than a climb through the lava tubes of Hitiaa. Situated on the rocky east coast, volcanic eruptions have forged channels through the rock. Over time, these have been penetrated by water and stunning waterfalls gush through the eroded sections. You will need a reliable pAir of shoes, a guide that knows the area and some quiet determination.

After our extreme hiking experience, it is time to chill out. We fell in love with the laid-back Polynesian approach to life at the InterContinental Resort Tahiti. With two infinity pools, a swim-up bar, dancing shows and choice of restaurants and cuisines, it rarely gets much better than this.

Moreish Moorea

Bidding the mainland farewell, we take a 45-minute ferry ride to the island of Moorea - Tahiti's sister island.

Moorea looks good enough to eat. Literally! On a four-wheel-drive trip around the island, we sample the plentiful papayas, mangoes, wild bananas, breadfruit, limes and watermelons that thrive in the volcanic soil. But the pick of the island's fruit salad is the deliciously sweet pineapple. Best sampled straight off the plant, our guide tells us the sugar content is so high they turn bad within 48 hours. This explains why you won't find them in your local supermarket and is all the more reason to devour as many as your tummy can handle.

Stop at one of the many black pearl boutiques scattered throughout Moorea. While your new husband might think wedding and engageMent rings are all the jewellery a woman needs, you can't go home without a Tahitian pearl encircling your finger or dripping from your neck. Unique to the pristine lagoon habitat, the pearls come in a range of colours such as aubergine, reddish-bronze, shimmering green or steel grey.

Moorea is also the home of the InterContinental Resort Moorea's Dolphin Centre, which is located amid the lush surrounds of the InterContinental Beachcomber Resort's estate. You will touch, play and communicate with these magnificent creatures in the shallows of the lagoon before donning a diving mask to observe their grace underwater. Your guide will teach you all about these intelligent mammals and will provide you with a souvenir photo of you and your new flippered friends.

After a tough day playing with dolphins, snorkelling, jet-skiing or scuba diving, you can mollify your muscles with a deep tissue Massage or a soothing wrap at Moorea's Hélène Spa. The spa treatMents take advanTAGe of Tahiti's plentiful flowers, fruits and plants and are freshly prepared with oils and exotic essences. For a particularly opulent treatMent, soak in a traditional Tahitian flower bath set in the green surrounds of one of the spa's private treatment rooms.

The lagoons of Bora Bora

It pains us to leave Moorea. That is, until our light plane lands in Bora Bora. With its sparkling lagoons in all hues of blue, velvety sand and coral gardens filled with rainbow coloured Fish, Bora Bora is indisputably Tahiti's most beautiful island.

The island is best experienced from the vanTAGe point of your own over water bungalow. We stayed at InterContinental Moana Beach Resort where each bungalow boasts a glass-bottomed coffee table, which can be opened up allowing you to feed bread to the many Fish that swarm beneath.

Lash out and order room service, which is brought to your private deck on an outrigger canoe. Then spend the day exploring the lagoons by canoe, snorkelling or people-Watching from a hammock strung between towering coconut trees.

For a memorable experience, take a boat trip to a nearby sandbar where you can hand feed stingray in waist-deep water. Despite what you expect, stingrays rarely sting. And the feeling of these metre-wide grey beauties slipping and sliding up your legs is indescribable. If you are brave enough, offer a morsel of raw fish and Watch as one gently accepts it from your fingers.

From there, ask your guide to take you to the deeper waters for some manta ray spotting. Our guide throws fresh meat into the water before directing us to jump in and see the fish. We oblige and join the thousands of fish that come to feed. Our fun is short-lived, however, as we look down and see 10 to 12 sharks circling below. Despite our guide's assurances that reef sharks are not partial to human flesh, our heartbeats don't slow until we are back aboard the safety of our boat.

Even if water sports are not usually your thing, be sure to take a jet ski tour around the island. At first terrifying, you will soon by shrieking with delight as you master the powerful machines. After a few hours bouncing over the waves of the lagoon, we guarantee you will be a petrol head by the time your tour is over.

After all this aquatic activity you will be hungry. A traditional Tahitian picnic on a motu - the Tahitian word for 'little island' - is a must. While we swim in the turquoise water, local chefs cook a feast fit for royalty. And as you might expect in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, seaFood is on the menu.

Cooked in earth ovens, we savour fresh and fleshy perch, parrotfish, barracuda, mahi-mahi and more, flavoured with Tahiti's famous vanilla beans and soused in creamy coconut milk. Following the old 'when in Rome' adage, we eat with our hands from hand-woven vine leaf plates. Food seems to taste even better in paradise.

And while on the topic of Tahitian cuisine, be sure to visit the island's best-known restaurant Bloody Mary's. With its sandy floor, tree-stump seating and fire lighting, you'll feel like you are on the set of Survivor. Except this is one island you won't want to be voted off. There is no official menu. Instead, diners choose from a seaFood selection delivered daily by local fisherman. While your choice of fish is being cooked to perfection, sip a Bloody Mary - the restaurant's signature beverage.

The only downside of Tahiti as a honeymoon destination is the cost: accommodation, food and drinks are very expensive. But hey, you only get married once - or maybe twice.

And with a smorgasbord of things to see and do including whale Watching, snorkelling, scuba diving, playing golf, horse riding, bike riding, sailing, canoeing, kayaking, jet skiing, water skiing, caving, fishing, black pearl and handcraft shopping, swimming with dolphins and manta ray, observing the world beneath in a glass bottom boat - you'll want to extend your honeymoon, forever.

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Create and record music with your computer - Part 1 - Hardware

This article is for those who want to start recording music on a Computer at home. It 'the first of a series of articles.

If you're in a band and you're trying to do a demo big house. Are you a singer / songwriter in the digital age are affected. Or maybe you have an acoustic guitar, and want to launch a song or two. A drummer without a guitarist, a bass player without a drummer? Sometimes people do not need the whole band. Maybe youI just want to try to sell jingles.

Motu Machfive

This is the first part of this band ... PASSION for creating your own music. If you read this, I can only assume that is also frozen.

Create and record music with your computer - Part 1 - Hardware

The hardware of the Computer will read a lot about this important player in the whole Internet. And 'the heartbeat of your car audio. Tower of Power Are you going to say. monitor, keyboard and mouse. At this time, questions arise as to restart the machine.

How much ram? What is aGHz? I need a large hard drive right? PC or MAC? My Computer is 5 years, your mother! That's what I read this work in progress?

If you're just starting out, tell everyone that bigger is better ... will not be sold. Be smart and do some research. (Maybe this article is your departure?)

Here are some things to keep in mind in our world, along with some personal recomMendations. Heck, I'll say what I personally use. Do not see howIt is not a magic secret.

Hard Disk:. With USB mass storage nowadays, it is necessary to "run and support programs," a hard drive does not say keep everything that falls from 1 day ... I'm sure many people have when reading a Computer "there" before (or maybe two?) So I shall spare you the details. In short, you have the time, effort and passion all been wasted. Tips and recomMendations:

The best thing you can do is appoint a "AudioComputer " Do not do your taxes on it. Do not do to her grandmother's birthday card. (Programs of graphics and audio programs ... AT ALL!) The Internet is not necessary (and it is on every car audio, I even banned) PC'ers ... go with a bare bones version of XP Everything was just MAC'ers System 7.

Having said all this ... to 80 GB (or larger) hard drive audio input will suit your needs well.

Processor and RAM: This is simple andsets on the individual patient. If your comfortable multitasking, you may not need the Fastest, snap your head back in the chAir system. All this boils down to you, the individual, and how your work (or should work) with your computer sound.

First, if you've just started to ride ponies, probably are not signing to ride the bulls the next day. No need to go out and buy a so-called, computer audio for $ 3,000.00. If you can, hey, that's great.But if you just started and they know nothing at all, when they grow up in this system, you want (not need) is another.

Tips and recomMendations:

A system or (if you want to work fluently)

Start with something like an e-machine ... 1GB of RAM, a processor and say 3.0 (intel ... Stick with audio software used as "standard"), you can use other (AMD, etc.), but other configurations can be made ... and if your only just begun ... you wantGet Started!

SYSTEM OR B (If your budget is limited ... who does not)

You can down a notch ... For example, 512 MB of RAM and a processor 2.0 (Intel Press) So, what is the victim here? The audio files take time to "render". With the first system (SYSTEM) ... is doing an average 2-3 minutes. With System B, is about 7-10 minutes. When I started to record ... 15 minutes was "state of the art". More "lock up" escaped with minor amounts of ram as well.E-bay has some great cars worth Watching too.

Computers other things: Your going to want to make the system a couple of USB ports (4) and a pAir of Firewire ports (at least). I'm not going to enter in the distribution of ports, or to explain how it works because ... Who cares, just connect audio equipment and that is that ... Why do we want? The display box or you read when you get to a computer, tells you everything about the systemto offer. It will also tell you how many of these ports will have it.

Let's go to anything fun ... Oh! That's right, my system. Well, after reading what you have already done so, I decided to plant a decent enough (for now) with a moderate budget.

Are you ready? I use (times like these I would like this company paid me)

A gateway GR550 (do not believe 'em more) Do not get me wrong here, these computer systems is now day to blow off the map ... But it's about what youdoes not need, what the industry needs to push. The only thing I had to do was upgrade the ram, and an additional 512 MB to make it a 1GB. These audio-machine is a heart that beats most important day of my study.

INTERFACE Hey, it's a word techie mad ... but only if you have not noticed, it is not possible to connect a guitar to the new machine. That's where the interface comes in. The interface is the connection between the guitar / microphone and the computer.

Horror! On AudioMarket ... You need to make more decisions. USB or FireWire? We take only the easiest way. USB is a good connection as "audio signal" is. What I have noticed over the years, it was more "clicks" and "popping" during recording and playback with USB interface. Get a Firewire (they said) Here are a few to check:

TonePort (USB) Ideal for young starters Stealth (USB) is ideal for young guitarists

Hey, moms and dads ... These are greatChristmas music is inspiring your young!

Hey, moms and dads ... These make great Christmas gift for you!

M-Audio 1816 (FW) MOTU (FW)

I bet you know what I need it? ... I currently have an M-Audio Project Mix. I started taking my birth with a Delta 66 uses a PCI interface and requires a "card" installed on your computer. I am a bit 'geeky, and not be afraid when it comes to opening them ... But if you do, is PCInot the path. Again, the use of new technologies for the same price.

Today, there is a fire wire. I must say that the PCI The most reliable way to record. Do not worry, Firewire is very, very closely followed, with USB comes in third.

Well gang, ending a hardware part. Doing a little research 'and get a good sound system starting point. Part 2 will have the software. This part is so fun, it can be two long articles.

Until next time

Create and record music with your computer - Part 1 - Hardware