Hink wrote:obviously you have very limited experience with other hoststeomi wrote:Just wait for the screencast boys. Using items from a dropdown menu is just one way. There are knobs and buttons for everything and you can work with most control surfaces as well.
The only real comparable DAW to SAW is PT (other than MIDI) in the sense that it relies on kbrd shortcuts knowledge to really get up to speed with it.
I would say 99% of people that felt underwhelmed with SawStudio were the ones that didn't want to spend the time needed to pass the short yet crucial learning curve.
SAW Studio does not follow common windows procedures. So the use of mouse gestures is quite different compared to anything else.
I won't comment whether it's sounding better or not.
E
The only real comparable DAW to SAW is PT (other than MIDI) in the sense that it relies on kbrd shortcuts knowledge to really get up to speed with it![]()
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That is a joke and a half, have you tried cubase (I never have), sonar, studio one, samplitude, sequoia, neundo, and many others...I cant wait for this video you make but. FWIW keystroke is the same thing as keyboard shortcuts and this is not some new technology, I know samplitude and AA do this very well (samp is also skinable). I have not tried SAW, I have asked you direct questions and one of them you answered directly...it's not 64 bit. Other than that no other questions have been answered and tbh I can not be bothered to even attempt to demo it when I have something that does everything I need very, very, well and has the customer base to back this up.
The same holds true with many other hosts available for many users, but once again if it works for you that's great but if I am going to even think about spending 2000 dollars for all those limitations it better do some things that are decades ahead of the rest, not behind
EDIT: also working with controllers is not something unique either
If you read all I mentioned before, you can see that I am using Cubase and Protools daily. I've been using DAWs since 1992...
So instead of assuming I have limited experience. Know who you're talking to. Just courtesy...
There are a lot of standard features with audio editing that you simply cannot get in, say, Cubase, without programming macros. And even then it is never going to respond as fast...
Trim region from region start to cursor...
Trim region end to cursor....
Selecting a range without moving to a new tool....
Conforming a selection to a region..
prevent overlaps by default...
...Regions...which are a joke in Cubase for instance...
Batch processing of regions which is not intuitive in Cubase...
...Moving the cursor from within the arrangement window and not only through a ruler -- which is probably great for production but not so great for editing..
Most of these features and behaviors are common practice for Pro Tools and Saw Studio users, hence the comparison...
And these are just a 'few' that I can think of top of my head while eating lunch right now...
I'm happily using Cubase for all my production needs. But will prefer sending all the digital audio data stream live to Saw and work within its mixer to render stems and to final mixing and mastering on the fly.
E.
