I like these as they have phantom power for your microphone, twin inputs, headphone monitoring and don’t require a driver software to work on the Mac mini. I would recommend something along the lines of an M-Audio AIR 192|6*, which you can pick up for around £100-120 new. Thankfully, they are pretty affordable these days. I’m working with the assumption that you don’t already own an audio interface. All we need now is an audio interface, a monitor, a keyboard, a mouse, and somewhere to write our audio files to. Logic Pro will set you back £199.99, which means for around £800, including our Mac mini, we have a rock-solid DAW. I always use external hard drives for the storage of samples and audio files, so I can get a better deal by using these instead. The cost-saving applies for internal storage in the Mac mini, since all my DAW software and plugins take up very little space. There appears to be no huge increase in performance using 16GB anyway when it comes to working with Logic Pro. I’m not doing any video editing, so I can save money by not adding more memory, which I really do not need. I personally went for the 8GB of RAM, as I only use my Mac mini for Logic Pro and, occasionally, Reaper.
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