Hello! There is someone knocking the door? Open the door men! just when fixture made tilt movement just open the door. Good video. It's important to attend hardware to run ma3. It's good info. Thanks.
SoC: System on a Chip. The M1 series processors (and now the M2's) have most of the system (including graphics) all built into the chip. The have LOADS of cores. And loads of graphics cores as well. But yeah, still no touch screens on the Mac. They don't wanna mess with the iPad line, and claim macos still isn't really built for touch interaction and don't want to do something that isn't just a great experience. Eh, neither is windows really, but I love it on windows anyway.
I am using a M2 Mac Mini with a IIYAMA 27" touch monitor that has a driver for Mac OS and it is super responsive & works perfectly. The integrated GPU is not a problem at all. Also with the I/O of the new Mac mini you avoid the dongle nest that was so characteristic of the previous gens. I think the M2 pro would be even better, but the price performance compared to a compact Win machine starts to disappear. However no multitouch functionality on the monitor with Mac OS (single touch only) which is not that important for Grand MA3, but also only one touch monitor per system. So I like it it as my "programming" setup because it is literally piggybacking on my monitor and super compact, but for my away system will probably go dual touch monitors with a compact Win PC. I just haven't found the best compact PC yet. Any ideas?
Nice, glad you found a setup that works for you at home. At this time I would say maybe the Zotac Magnus One would be a good PC for MA3. Its not huge and has a GPU.
@@cgmedia5884 Your video got me googling mini PCs and I found the NUC12 from Intel, but by the time you add RAM, SSD and a GPU you are looking at €3.000,- easy. So probably not...
I just want to design the lighting at home from a Mac Studio (no have it yet) using de 3D of our venue, store everything and then test it there from the grandMa3.