to know Logic thoroughly you indeed need a manual.. but having said that, even some professional users have never even opened the environment. If you're familiar with modern sequencers like Cubase, Sonar etc. you can jump right in and not touch any of the 'deep' features.crimsonwarlock wrote:As I said, I'm convinced it is very powerfull. But I tried to get started with the (obviously lighter) version that came with Music Studio 2005 and just couldn't get the hang of it. From your own statements it is clear that you NEED manuals and/or books as you say yourself that the usermanual is 'not always helpfull or informative'. It's clear that Logic's user interface 'clicks' with some people and not with others. I'm now a SONAR-user and I had it set up with all my plugins readilly available, my midi-keyboard connected and working and running a midi-sequence on a VSTi with some VST effects on it within half an hour or so from first installing the application. And that without reading one line of text in a manual (it's SONAR LE so there isn't even a manual, only a helpfile, but didn't read that either), all because it's user-interface is largely self explanatory. I seriously have never heard of anyone doing that with Logic after 'first contact'
But to be honest, I've seen some people make the same claims about SONAR as the ones I (and others) make about Logic. So again I say: to each his own
As I mentioned before, the osx versions are not like the windows versions anymore. A lot of the weird-and-complicated has been replaced since those days
