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> If anyone out > there is doing all their signal processing and looping on a laptop, > I'd love to hear the specs of what they're using. I run a two years old Pentium 4 Mobile, 1 Gig of Ram, 845 chipset. It is a "no name" Xeron (www.xeron.de) notebook, but at the time I ordered it, this was the only company, that could clearly tell me which chipset, cardbus controller, firewire controller etc. was in there. I was reading computer magazines and audio-websites a few month before buying it to avoid any compatibility problem. Apart from a heating problem due to dust in the fan it ran without problems for a lot of gigs during the last 2 years. I payed $3000 for it with a second battery for 3-4 hours of playing. I've got the RME multiface as soundcard (www.rme-audio.de) Before I was doing just sound processing with CubaseSX but now I run Bidule as VST host and Möbius for looping. As Bidule can switch off plugins which are not needed I can switch between different FX chains from 5 to 15 VSTs. With Möbius playing 6 tracks of 5 layers and some heavy effects it runs at 80%. The border to glitch-danger is at about 85. Of course I've got ideas what to do if my notebook was 10 times faster. Most I wish to use a Impulse response reverb like the one from voxengo, but it needs way too much processing power. I don't think now is a good time for buying a new computer. There are too many things changing at the moment. I wait for a time when all computers have 2 or 4 cores-cpus and firewire 800 and when I can run Windows XP on a Powerbook;-) I have tried the opposite which wasn't too exciting. The main disadvantages of my notebook for live playing is the instability of the housing. Matthias (L) http://matthias.loibner.net