I actually think it is a great feature of REAPER and sets it apart from most other DAW apps.Art Evans wrote: I mean, if portable apps had been invented first, would anyone think that installed apps represented an advance?
REAPER is probably the ultimate example of DAW portability. I would even suggest Justin start using the DAW on a keychain moniker to further illustrate this. If you've watched the recent "rough edit" of the "Mixing in the Box" seminar where Justin gave a live demonstration of REAPER (about 18 minutes and a relatively big download, 156MB QT video) you would be impressed. He walks onto the stage with a USB stick inserts it into a (I believe it was a Digi rig) and in a few moments he is recording/mixing. At the end of the demo he takes out the USB stick and explains to the audience how you can run REAPER off of a USB stick on just about any computer made in the last 10 years (anything from an old Pentium running Win98 to the latest Vista & octo-quads) and be up in running in a matter of seconds. Totally self contained and un-intrusive to the host system as it does not need to install anything or rely on the Windows registry or it's dll's or even worry about copy protection issues, just hot plug and go.
http://techbreakfast.com/video/reaper_demo.mov
REAPER.....your DAW on a keychain! Don't leave home without it!
Hehehe....I think I'll put that rather catchy phrase into my signature






