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Easily. That being said, Reaper (for only $60) is pretty freaking amazing and it's what I use on PC. My home studio is built around Logic, but in our rehearsal room I have a PC with an 2 Saffire Pro 40's and we record in Reaper. Where everything is streamlined and built tight on Apple, it's all up in the air on PC.
Short answer: no. Solution: just get a Mac. If money is an issue buy second hand or refurbished. The oldest compatible machine for the latest version of Logic is a LATE 2012 machine. A Mac mini would probably be your cheapest option. I don't believe there's any way to run Logic on anything other than a Mac.
Start your projects in your preferred DAW, or if you’re new to recording, get a good free DAW like Reaper, then port the raw audio files and MIDI files to Logic on the classroom computers. (audioz is great site for free stuff). Keep your projects simple, the less automation the better.
Hackintosh? Logic Pro X on Windows? No. Logic Pro X on PC hardware? Yes, via Hackintosh. What are you using GarageBand on? GarageBand iOS is not the same as OS X, what makes you feel you’ve mastered it? Just curious, as a user of GarageBand iOS and Logic (over 10 years).
Studio One or Cubase. U my friend...have unwillingly declared war between two long lost enemies of popular choice. Studio One or FL Studio. FL has some pretty good native plugins (I fucking adore Sytrus and Harmor) and Studio One is just generally very similar to Logic, just lacking a bit as far as native plugins.
Hence, I thought of using a Virtual Machine for running Logic Pro X on my laptop. My laptop Specs : 8GB RAM. 4GB Graphics (NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650Ti) Intel i5 10th gen. (these are the basic specs) I am ready to upgrade my laptop's RAM upto 32GB if needed. (I am going to upgrade to 16GB anyway)
I've tried so many. It's like trying to navigate a space ship, but first you have to download 34 random drivers from 3 different sites that aren't even part of the product's domain. And then after that, you run into issues or delays that are due to hardware, but apparently don't exist when using Logic Pro. It's the same thing with printers.
However, I think Logic’s stock library is pretty much unmatched unless you delve into things like Ableton Suite - but that costs much much more. I actually moved from Windows to Mac for music production last year, and it took some time to get used to it, but I love it now. Curious to know why you’re switching to windows?
MacBook pro hard drives are really easy to replace. You could just do that if you are otherwise still happy with your MacBook and logic. Studio One or Ableton are both good imo. For mixing and recording i'd say ProTools hands down. Otherwise Yes Ableton Live, Studio One are both valid choices.
Yes but only if you install logic first then omnisphere. No. Simplest solution, if you have an Intel-based Mac, would be to install Windows on your Mac using Bootcamp. You should really consider using an external drive regardless of whether you are using a PC or Mac anyway.