Hi kovacs,kovacs wrote:For the record, I listed Logic *Express*, not Logic. My point was really just to show that there are plenty of choices on the OSX platform already, and the market is much, much smaller and as such untenable for a one-man operation.
I think the market *is* too competitive - if you add Garageband, for example, into the mix (or even Audacity while we're at it) there isn't that much of a market left. But - I am ignorant of the amount of pre-OSX people who actually use Muzys so take my analysis with a huge pinch of salt.
I am a PC DAW/Mac laptop user so I tend to use tools that are available for both platforms.
I realize that you mentioned Logic Express, rather than Logic, and I apologize for conflating them. But I'm not sure it really makes a difference other than to help define a market by price point. My general argument here is that it might not be useful to compare all these apps, and thus lump them into the same market, because their intended functionality (other than their general purpose to create music) is quite different. An analogy is this: would it be fair to compare ProTools with Cubase simply because they both have audio editing capabilities? Or can we really compare Live to Garageband? I'm not so sure. They are all very different apps with different capabilities, and are geared at different segments of the market. This latter point could also be interpreted as meaning these various apps are actually aimed at different markets.
Thus I think a crucial question for Jo - presuming he wants to develop a sequencer-host - is what segment of the market should he aim for. Answering this might help narrow down the potential competition, as well as suggest which features would be valuable, and (as the previous Muzys-related thread noted) which would just contribute to bloat.
As for the pre-OSX users that use Muzys, this group is likely shrinking as the only effective way to run it is to boot into OS9. Current Macs (G5s, AlBooks) can't do this. But there are some of us still floating around!
Which raises another question: since Apple will soon be switching to an Intel-based architecture, what effect might this have on post-Muzys's development? Does it even make sense for Jo to code for the PowerPC architecture given its imminent demise?
cheers, Lewis