I'd agree with most of this, and would like to add a few points:bigcat1969 wrote:Finally quality wise Kontakt is certainly better though most of its sounds fall well below the top instruments out there. Dimension Pro is a really a mix of synth and sampler while Kontakt is more sampler. It shows in the sounds, with the Expansion Packs Dim Pro has a touch under 4 gigs of sounds most of them compressed. Kontakt has 25 gigs with their new compression scheme. This means in general Dimpro is working with much smaller or more lightly sample instruments. To counteract this they use synth very aggressively on most instruments. The guitars (650 samples, 215 megs), strings (1.2 gigs 2k samples), brass (85, 250 samples) and sax (67 megs, 300 samples) all sound quite reasonable, but most other instruments especially the GPO sound very synthy.
Categorically
Pianos edge to Kontakt but neither is going to satify anyone.
Organs solid edge to Kontakt.
Synth huge edge to Dim Pro. However...
Vintage Synth is all Kontakt.
Guitars edge to Dim Pro.
Bass is a draw.
Drums are just confusing but an edge to Kontakt.
Slight Edge to Kontakt.
Orchestra to Kontakt in a rout.
Choir Kontakt in another rout.
World non-percussion is a huge edge to Kontakt.
Loops are all Dim Pro. But sadly I doubt any of us care about loops.
The file system is orders of magnitude better on Kontakt.
Third party support is almost entirely Kontakt.
So overall Dimpro wins for synthers and loopers, comes quite close as a band instrument. Kontakt wins utterly in Orchestra, Choir, World and Vintage as well as interface, file system and third party support.
- ● DimPro comes "free" with some versions of SONAR (or $20 on sale), while Kontakt's full version (with all libraries) can be quite expensive.
● DimPro uses Garritan's "Pocket Orchestra", while Kontakt uses Vienna Symphonic Library. Apples and oranges there.
● DimPro hasn't really been "updated" in quite a while, but Kontakt gets a new version with new features almost every year--whether you need any of it or not.
● Kontakt's guitars don't sound too great out of the box, but you can do a lot more with them, thanks to Kontakt's scripting features. Add an amp/cab sim, and you're good to go.
● DimPro's guitars sound nice and processed, but as HaganeSteel pointed out, the have some problems with the samples.
Steve
