Of course this is all mere speculation... neither of us have a clue what Ableton will do.Daags wrote: And I'm sure Gerhard Behles sheds a solitary tear for each and everyone one of the individuals that are like you.
Meanwhile, the bigger picture: Ableton is a behemoth in the DAW marketplace, and there's a significant LIVE-specific controller market that Ableton keeps afloat. In the Amazon 'Best Sellers' rankings for daw controllers, there are two LIVE-specific controllers (Push 2 & APC) in the top 10, there are two more LIVE-'inspired' controllers. The rest of the top ten are generic. In the 'most wished for daw controller' section, the top 2 controllers are LIVE-specific (Push 2 & APC). So losing a few die-hard MPE enthusiasts on the short term is a small price to pay for the long term gain in making sure their strategy in rolling out full native MPE support in their software benefits their hardware above all others.
if we see a LIVE update that brings full native MPE support, I'm wagering it coincides with a full MPE compatible hardware launch of their own. Mickey mouse short term losses by not supporting it before hand aren't going to make anyone in the boardroom sweat.
My speculation is Ableton is not going to make an expensive MPE controller.
I have a Push... go look at many of the videos online of people using Live + Push. It is not about the type of expressive playing that would benefit from MPE. That is not Ableton's user base. It is beats and dance music and most of the people using Live have no real need of MPE. Push is good enough, and the areas they are focused on improving are about better control of Live from the hardware.
Both Push 1 and 2 support polyAT in the hardware... yet even after years, Live still cannot record even that. That is not their market or focus.