Those DAWs practically automate ADR and other workflows. when you're running dozens of Mics with RT plug-ins. Large recording setups depend on Hardware DSP for low latency recording esp. Most music production DAWs can't do anything beyond 5.1 Surround. People here have no knowledge of the market. We can see the content in the notifications, people. People are downvoting and then deleting their responses because they forgot to run a Google search, lol. No one here hesitates to push it, and will readily downvote any replies that mention its cost in a negative way. Live Suite costs almost as much as Nuendo. Standard SKU price is fairly in line with competing down-market DAWs (Cubase Pro, Samplitide Pro X Suite, Pyramix Pro, etc.). I don't understand the complaints against Pro Tools' cost.Īlmost no one on this subreddit needs Pro Tools Ultimate. Pro Tools is used for more than just music. Studio One is unusable in higher end post-production. I actually think Nuendo is one of the better deals in that market segment, at $970'ish. Pyramix MassCore is thousands, and Pro is comparable to Pro Tools Native. It's like people have never looked at the price of other DAWs. The cost argument against pro tools is retarded. They could charge $700 for a PC version and it would probably sell, but they probably have figured out software is pirated and keeping it Mac-only means users need to purchase a $2k dongle to run it, which is more profitable.Īny DAW that competes with Pro Tools in those markets are just as expensive, and in multiple cases, moreover. I'm pretty sure a lot of PC users would welcome a PC version Logic, but it's obvious Apple see Logic as a marketing vehicle to sell more computers. Logic being Mac-only sucks for PC users who would like to use Logic. I'm a PC user (I'd be giving up too much quality of life moving to Mac) but I don't think claiming Logic runs on 10% of computers is a fair statement, because for a lot of people Logic runs on 100% of computers those people use (Mac people), and most people only use one platform therefore the cross-platform capability is mostly valuable to the software developer since they can target a broader user base and to users who want to switch platform, which is usually a long-term commitment, not something you do every other day. Tl dr StudioOne is great, but isn't compelling enough to make most people switch from their DAW of choice. And I don't think StudioOne has enough of a "hook" to get people to switch. I think most people would be happy with it, but not a lot of people want to switch after they've already learned a DAW. I see StudioOne as a jack of all trades, master of none sort of DAW. and there's not a whole lot of market space for a relative newcomer (StudioOne has "only" been around for about 10 years.) I used to use Reaper.)Īdd in other DAWs like Cakewalk, Cubase, Tracktion, etc. Reaper is the "inexpensive option" (and amazing. ProTools is still unfortunately the professional standard.Ī lot of people in the pro audio world have Macs, and Logic is seen by many as the next best alternative.įL Studio and Ableton have been around for almost 20 years a piece, and have both found their niche in the hip-hop and EDM communities respectively, so there are lots of tutorials for them. As to why people don't use it, I have a few theories: I use StudioOne exclusively and I think it's great.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |