1. A hardware instrument with latency compensation.
2. Some kind of useful step sequencer device.
3. VST Plugin sandboxing.
I'm very interested to see what they add cause I have no clue. I'm pretty satisfied with Studio One as is but here's my wishlist (your #2 is my top choice).rodanmusic wrote:3 things I want and that's literally all I feel I need from this daw:
1. A hardware instrument with latency compensation.
2. Some kind of useful step sequencer device.
3. VST Plugin sandboxing.
No doubt VST midi fx have bee neglected by all the DAW's.InLight-Tone wrote:SO4 Wishlist:
-Chord Track
-Expression Maps
-Open up NoteFX lane to all MidiVst's
-Add some depth and roundedness to the GUI....
This!Aliens wrote:Like with past S1 updates I'll be all... Watch the video... Like it but decide it's not worth $199... Wait until the sales and they sell it off for $89 at jrr...Then buy it.
Should give them enough time to fix the bugs and iron out the faults that come with most updates.
Upgrades from Studio One 1 & 2 Professional to 3.5 costs around £110 or $149 US, which was what I paid for it on release. You wouldn't get Studio One Professional for £60 or $80 US, unless someone was selling it to you, but even then, the seller incurs a transfer licence fee. The only other exception is the Educational license which I don't believe to be able to be resold. If you're going from Artist to Professional, then the fee would be obviously higher. If Studio One is your primary daw of choice, you like what you see / want ...I'll predict that you will be selling your hamster to get it...regardless of any bugs there may or may not be that affect you.Aliens wrote:Like with past S1 updates I'll be all... Watch the video... Like it but decide it's not worth $199... Wait until the sales and they sell it off for $89 at jrr...Then buy it.
Should give them enough time to fix the bugs and iron out the faults that come with most updates.
I know how much the updates were, thanks for that.THE INTRANCER wrote: Upgrades from Studio One 1 & 2 Professional to 3.5 costs around £110 or $149 US, which was what I paid for it on release. You wouldn't get Studio One Professional for £60 or $80 US, unless someone was selling it to you, but even then, the seller incurs a transfer licence fee. The only other exception is the Educational license which I don't believe to be able to be resold. If you're going from Artist to Professional, then the fee would be obviously higher.
Not quite, this boi don't fan the way some appear to, so unless it's totally game changing, which I predict it won't be, I'll buy the update in a deal after the early adopters have shed all their bug tears and it's cheap... Just like usual.THE INTRANCER wrote:If Studio One is your primary daw of choice, you like what you see / want ...I'll predict that you will be selling your hamster to get it...regardless of any bugs there may or may not be that affect you.
1. Wasnt pipline plugin made for that in s1 already?rodanmusic wrote:3 things I want and that's literally all I feel I need from this daw:
1. A hardware instrument with latency compensation.
2. Some kind of useful step sequencer device.
3. VST Plugin sandboxing.
Submit: News, Plugins, Hosts & Apps | Advertise @ KVR | Developer Account | About KVR / Contact Us | Privacy Statement
© KVR Audio, Inc. 2000-2026