Such lists illustrate that the reason one might choose a different sequencer is due to personal workflow and expectation. But to people earlier in the thread claiming Sonar is stomping over the entire DAW world, I say, please. Not until Cakewalk goes after that damn Mac-based studio market.Brandon {Cakewalk} wrote:One could easily make a list going the other direction pointing out holes in the competetive packages to SONAR, but professional courtesy prevents me from doing such a thing. Finding ten things that are missing/subpar, etc in any DAW is quite a simple task if you take the time to think about it.mojkarma wrote:Here are some observations that I made about sonar5. I invite especially those who think that sonar5 finally makes cubase looking old, to read:
I reiterate, if Cakewalk released a "Sonar X" for OS X on Mac, I'd be chomping at the bit to try it out. Logic is making me pull my hair out, and the alternatives are too damn expensive for what they offer in their various versions (and of course I've got the requisite Pro Tools set up). If Cakewalk started targeting the Mac-based studio market where everybody is paying $10,000 for Nuendo and Pro Tools systems when Sonar 5 PE does what they do at half the price, you'd have a true "Pro Tools killer" on your hands.
I contacted some Cakewalk customer support person about a Mac version, and they said they'd "pass the suggestion to the relevant parties."
