VST is a commn denominator. I hope you are right, but I don't take Roland Reps very seriously, since usually they know little about what they are talking about (just what their marketing department told them).ChiTown24 wrote:they also called them VSTs for a reason, if you pay any heed to the Roland Reps in the video I linked to at least.
What the VST benefits is depending on the specific VST. Again, I hope you are right, but it's yet to be seen. About the System-1. It's not just a dongle. It's where the plug-in runs - that's why it can be also a "plug-out". So, the question is no longer "if", but how well it's programmed to take advantage of the specifications, and what formats will be supported (32-bit, 64-bit, VST2, VST3, AU, AAX). And for how long. Roland has a long history of abandoned software for hardware support, and maintaining plug-ins updated is a hard task.ChiTown24 wrote: Of course, they haven't specified if the VST/plugin versions will operate independently of the System-1 controller. But even in the likely scenario that the System-1 serves as a dongle/DSP ... a VST version is still a plugin, and will still benefit from all the VST/ITB luxuries that are associated with plugins. instant recall per project, preset management etc etc etc. People still call dongle protected VSTs 'plugins'... for a reason.