![]() Can't find one that has the right combination for my money's worth, so I still use Adobe Audition which I can get things done with to my satisfaction. I really like what the 32C has to offer and believe I could find myself enjoying rolling up my sleeves and developing a relationship, but like other DAW's that do work with all functions on a laptop (virtually all), each has a significant Achilles Heal (deal breaker) with certain flexibility and features that several competitor's alternatively provide. I guess I'm trying to say I need a DAW whose features sit well with me, and for that DAW to provide all its features on a laptop. I can accept losing vertical visualization of the channel but not the ability to open and collapse the various functions in that channel without the option to provide the chosen window's full display of controls. At least the ability to easily select a channel strip's specific area and open and collapse those segments in order to have all options available when the chosen segment is open. I realize the idea of keeping the large desk format open is of great appeal, but to dismiss the ability to use it on anything but a very large monitor is sadly short-sighted as it dismisses a large segment of potential users without such monitors IMO. In this case, visual accessibility is an accommodation nearly every DAW provides. The reason it's silly is the irony in that when I find the missing function in nearly all the other DAW competitors, those DAW's will be missing the one or two deal breakers that the one I had to previously dismiss does! The shame is that when I find a DAW I like, there's often a silly reason it will not work out for my needs/desires. I'm looking at the 32C as an option for my recording and mixing duties. This topic is important to me and it appears the only solution to allowing the functions of the 32C to be seen in all circumstances is by only using a large format monitor. With recent release of Renoise 2.7 we keep getting tools for every workflow.Hi, I'm new here and seeking a little more info. ![]() New version of JACK (and its D-BUS patched offspring) was released to fix bugs and provide a checker, which app makes an ALSA device busy.Several LV2 extensions were updated ( data-access, event, instance-access, midi, uri-map).The whole LV2 stack was redone, introducing several new libraries so far only Ardour 3 and most recent release of NASPRO makes use of it.There have been several more important releases lately: The team is still committed to Ardour, which is what Mixbus is based on, and keeps contributing to it. Mixbus is now out of “introductory” period, which means it’s available for its full price, $219. Ripple Editing mode is handy for editing voice records: if you delete a region, the next region will automatically move to the left, which makes cutting out all those nasty ums and ers from interviews much faster.Smart Object mode is a cross between object mode and region mode.Most notable new features are two new editing modes: Here is what the whole thing looks like now: The mixer strip can now additionally contain controls for plug-ins in use (you can map whatever you wish), and you can also control Input Trim, Makeup Gain, Sidechain and Master Limiter from the mixer. The actual selling point of Mixbus, the mix buses, was doubled: there are 8 of them now. Hopefully a choice of over 60 scales will suffice :)įinally, Mixbus 2.0 was released with some major improvements and new feature. You only have to enable a new toolbar in the MIDI editing window and select a scale you need. Just in case, it also works real-time for recording MIDI. The most useful real feature, it seems, is tapping tempo in the Tempo map dialog.Ī slightly exotic new feature is switching between scales when you do quantization: Most visible changes fix small usability nuisances here and there (visualization for muted tracks is especially nice). This is also a bugfix release which nevertheless has some new stuff. The shuttle widget was redesigned too:Ī more stable release is where Qtractor steps in. ![]() Same feature for MIDI tracks is currently in works. Mostly it provides bugfixes, but a very important new feature is compound regions: you can now join and split audio regions non-destructively. The most unstable of them is 5th alpha of Ardour 3, first new alpha release in nearly two months (the plan is to return to couple releases in a week routine). Few days ago three digital audio workstations (DAW) for Linux were released within 24 hours - an interesting coincidence, especially since all three releases represent various stages of completeness. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |