Apple eMac:
Record, mix, tweak, design and
produce — all in one box


By Steph Jorgl


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The eMac sprang forth from the classic iMac design, and arrived in the form of a stand alone, self-contained egg-shaped G4, initially designed solely for Apple’s education market. However, this computer can be a perfect multimedia and stand-alone studio machine, much like the iMac.

The eMac features a 17” flat CRT display, a G4 processor, and either a Combo(CD-burning/DVD reading) or SuperDrive(CD and DVD-burning). And because it’s all in one box, it takes up considerably less space than a tower, a monitor and a DVD or CD-burner would. The G4 eMacs are great machines for doing audio work and can handle any of the high or low-end apps currently out for both Mac OS 9 and Mac OS X.




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Connect Your eMac to External Drives and Interfaces
First of all, you don’t have to worry about connectability issues if you realize that the USB and FireWire ports built into the eMac gives you instant networking capability to other components. I use the FireWire ports on my studio machine to connect to a couple rackmount FireWire external hard drives, to my Apogee Trak 2 audio interface, and to all of my other studio machines. With FireWire, you don’t even need a network hub. You can just daisy-chain them together and every item connected will have access to the others along the daisy chain.

I also use the USB ports on my studio machine to hook up to a Unitor 8 rackmount MIDI interface, and also to my Logic Control virtual mixing console.


The G4 eMacs are great machines for doing audio work and can handle most of the high or low-end apps currently out for Mac OS X.


Top that with the built-in SuperDrive (DVD and CD readable/writeable), or a ComboDrive model (DVD readable and CD readable/writeable) and you can see that this is the perfect machine for audioheads who want to compose, tweak and burn from the same machine.

The eMac is a great starter studio machine — if you’re just getting into recording, mixing and playing with sound — but it also can be a serious workhorse, so long as you don’t need to move up to a serious Pro Tools rig yet. In fact, the eMac is a perfect engine to drive pretty much anything but apps that require additional DSP (digital signal processing) cards.

So, if you’re ready to get a eMac now and starting engineering some serious tracks in an all-in-one studio machine package, go ahead and select from the options to the right. You’ll still need a USB or FireWire-connected interface, and perhaps a keyboard controller and a mixing/control surface. Or, you can just do it all in the machine. When you purchase through Audiohead links, it helps support the site costs and maintenance, and you get the best available price on products through our affiliate program with Amazon.


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eMac lineup





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Apple eMac Desktop 17” M9252LL/A (1.0-GHz PowerPC G4, 128 MB RAM, 40 GB Hard Drive, DVD/CD-RW ComboDrive)

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eMac with Combo Drive


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