Aha got yashallow wrote:Now it is your turn to read what was written and also to understand what is there - Reaper is a conventional DAW - it has very little that is not available elsewhere and certainly does not have many of the interesting features that were suggested both by myself and many others who no longer frequent the Reaper forum. When Reaper introduced the chat as primary communication the development became dominated by people in the same timezone ie mainly Nth Americans - and the feature set became increasingly conventionalised. Software such as Usine or the more or less discontinued Temper are much more innovative. However as I mentioned earlier - in fact as I mentioned from about early 2007 - the most interesting thing Reaper has going for it as a project is the extensibility.gpunk wrote:Actually that is completely wrong, we have all gotten used to Reaper now and forget it's innovations very quickly, for one example it's API has been a revelation and Reaper would be nothing without the extensions from the SWS teamshallow wrote:I also think there was a lot of promise early for Reaper to be innovative, which I don't think has happened in the program itself, although the new extensions to Reascript might change all that. In other words Reaper itself as it is now is a fairly conventional DAW
So innovation is only innovation if it is innovative to you, I see where you are coming from now
Truth is Reaper was very innovative in a lot of areas but other hosts have either copied an approach or done their own twist on it
Usine is not innovative, give me a break its one in a long list of hosts that do what it does and now is even trying the save as VST market, yep very innovative (That is not to say it isn't good)
And neither was Temper either, plenty of Atari and Amiga apps followed that kind of paradigm
See how easy it is for what you think innovation is to be torn apart
Like i said, innovation is forgotten very very quickly and any app stands on its current merits and values

