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Pro Tools Or Cubase?, or anyother one?? |
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mer. 21 avril 2004, 22:07
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Senior Member
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Lieu : Providence - US
Membre no 12,850
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agreed! Auto freeze. I was just thinking about that the other day and if there is a reason it didn't exist in the audio world to my knowledge.
Cause there is a lot of downltime in computer recording - setting up mics, tweaking effects/patches, DECIDING wHat to DO, you know. Why not? iMovie does it! - As long as you could turn it off if you wanted. -Arvid
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-Arvid •• Squish the Squid Productions, Modest Machine•• digitally augmented trumpet, TOOB, flugelhorn, cracklebox, percussicube, no-input-mixers and Macbook Pro, 2.4 GHz 15", MacOS 10.5, MOTU Ultralite, Logic Studio 9, MaxMSP 5, JackOSX •• •• Electronic-experimental, jazz, digital instrument design, electronics, unique software and performance.••
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mer. 5 mai 2004, 11:49
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Newbie
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Membre no 42,152
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Try pro tools - your getting it anyway. If it's not for you then I would swing towards Logic. MacIDOL Mac Music Collective
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dim. 9 mai 2004, 19:49
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Newbie
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Membre no 42,412
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Pro Tools V 6.4 is the very latest and the Apple OSX version is brilliant. Midi has everyting and more than I need and as far as Audio goes, you can't beat it. However, Everytime you upgrade your Apple OS using the update software feature, you can guarantee there will!! be a problem. so be careful with those OS updates - if it ain't broke leave it as it is!! Logic Pro, is another story, and I am seriuosly thinking of getting that soon, just take a look at the plugins and power of what you get, it's superb!!! SO, if you're serious about working as a pro in the music industry get BOTH. But ... one step at a time, Pro Tools is so easy to use, it's just so CPU hungry, unless you are blessed with an HD system with all of their powercore cards etc, then you'll be flying .. one day ... M
Ce message a été modifié par cruiserman - dim. 9 mai 2004, 19:55.
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dim. 16 mai 2004, 18:16
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Newbie
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Membre no 40,242
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I'm on my 3rd sequencer and here's what I've learned so far: It's best to have the one that suits your computer - Mac or PC. Steinberg is a PC first company - meaning that if you run it on a Mac you can expect to always be a step behind the PC guys in terms of stability and bug fixes. Steinberg's reputation for poor customer service is legendary. (see their forums). Still, it is very sophisticated software. For example, you can quantize a group of notes and then days later unquantize one note in the middle of the group, without effecting any of the others. That is an incredible feature. Logic and DP are Mac based. Not sure about Pro Tools. Historically Pro Tools has a reputation as an audio app, not a midi one. Logic is highly regarded, better than DP in CPU economy - and now that Apple has it - incredibly expensive. DP is a smaller company, somewhat slow to keep up with the marketplace (AU and virtual instruments) - but runs really smoothly on a Mac and has quality customer service. There are general statements, of course, based on my own experiences and opinions.
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jeu. 20 mai 2004, 21:55
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Newbie
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ProTools LE is CPU driven. It relies on your computer's processor to do all the work. With computers now (such as the G4 and G5) it is a snap. Back when we were all on 286, 386 and 486 machines and small slow hard drives, ProTools was a dream because it used DSP cards to do all the work and ProTools used TDM technology.
TDM is Time Division Multiplexing. You'll find lots of information on that type of thing in the telecommunications field. If you are a comms tech you work with Frequency division and time division multiplexing. ProTools uses TDM and custom hardware to run it so your computer acts really as a conduit to your controllers and graphical display.
Logic Pro allows you to use Digidesign's TDM hardware technology and DSP cards including HD, so you see a bunch of top studios with ProTools TDM and Logic for the strengths of each.
Probably a hideous generalisation, but ProTools LE and MBox or 001 or 002 is a great start, but TDM is BIG GRUNT. TDM reduces latency in monitoring and allows you to record an enormous number of live inputs at once without a blink of a delay. Logic on its own with a plugin or two may give you a bit of a delay due to its full reliance on your CPU.
HOWEVER, if you run TDM hardware, Logic is a perfectly happy camper - and if you are primarily using software instruments and MIDI, Logic is stunning.
Personally I think ProTools strength is recording lots of live mic/line inputs, and Logic's is its MIDI/Sampling/Software Instruments.
WAAAY over generalised, and only my opinion, but I started with very little cash and had to make the wisest choices given all my other parameters and I chose Logic because I already was using FinalCutPro on a Mac and because my first jobs used software instruments - it was all done internally on my Mac. Then Apple bought E-Magic and it kinda worked out real well. I can buy any ProTools rig I want because I have the plugins to load logic onto it and have the best of both worlds if and when I want.
Cheers,
A
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