The German DAW's are all pretty expensivebazwillrun wrote:Cubase 9.5 £480.00
Reaper 5.9 £45.00
The price for starters !...
What's so special about Reaper?
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fluffy_little_something fluffy_little_something https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=281847
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- 12880 posts since 5 Jun, 2012
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- KVRAF
- 35434 posts since 11 Apr, 2010 from Germany
Ever saw what Cubase offers for the price? Also, again, IF you "are an individual or business using REAPER commercially, and yearly gross revenue does not exceed USD $20,000" you can buy the personal Reaper license. Otherwise, you'll have to pay $225. Which, i would say, is more or less the same, when you subtract all the content from Cubase. Maybe Cubase would be even cheaper then. Speculation, yes, but, the development of the content isn't free. And Cubase has loads of it. And when i say loads, i mean LOADS.bazwillrun wrote:Cubase 9.5 £480.00
Reaper 5.9 £45.00
The price for starters !...
- KVRAF
- 9077 posts since 28 May, 2005 from Netherneverlands
Too much for me personally. Same with Sonar. That could also be a choice factor, indeed.chk071 wrote:Speculation, yes, but, the development of the content isn't free. And Cubase has loads of it. And when i say loads, i mean LOADS.
No band limits, aliasing is the noise of freedom!
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- KVRAF
- 35434 posts since 11 Apr, 2010 from Germany
I agree. That's one of the reasons i'm using Studio One. At least it lets you choose what you install, and what not.Nielzie wrote:Too much for me personally.chk071 wrote:Speculation, yes, but, the development of the content isn't free. And Cubase has loads of it. And when i say loads, i mean LOADS.
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fluffy_little_something fluffy_little_something https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=281847
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- 12880 posts since 5 Jun, 2012
Same here, I do not want their content, I just want the naked DAW.Nielzie wrote:Too much for me personally. Same with Sonar. That could also be a choice factor, indeed.chk071 wrote:Speculation, yes, but, the development of the content isn't free. And Cubase has loads of it. And when i say loads, i mean LOADS.
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- KVRAF
- 1836 posts since 29 Mar, 2013
ACTION STATIONS ACTION STATIONS, BRACE FOR IMPACT! INCOMING IN 3..2..1...Same here, I do not want their content, I just want the naked DAW.
Beauty is only skin deep,
Ugliness, however, goes right the way through
Ugliness, however, goes right the way through
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- Banned
- 163 posts since 9 Jan, 2011
"What's so special about Reaper?"
Download the demo version and find out for yourself. It's a MASSIVE download - 12MB.
Download the demo version and find out for yourself. It's a MASSIVE download - 12MB.
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- KVRAF
- 35434 posts since 11 Apr, 2010 from Germany
Don't think it was really a question. Rather free community advertising.
I'd get tarred, feathered and crucified for doing the same with Cubase, BTW. Just sayin'.
I'd get tarred, feathered and crucified for doing the same with Cubase, BTW. Just sayin'.
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- KVRian
- 702 posts since 9 May, 2005
Reaper is probably the closest you'll find to a single DAW application that's, "all things to all people".
It's flexible/configurable almost to a fault.
It can take a while to get everything configured to your liking... which can be a "put-off" to some folks.
If you're running heavy projects, Reaper is currently the most CPU efficient DAW.
Being a relatively new DAW application, Reaper devs were able to look at top features from other DAW apps... and incorporate similar features (and try to improve upon them).
Being newer, there's not decades of "legacy code" (necessary for backward compatibility) dragging down performance and bloating the size.
The company behind Reaper is in a very unique situation.
They're small/dynamic... (not a lot of red-tape to bog things down)
It's flexible/configurable almost to a fault.
It can take a while to get everything configured to your liking... which can be a "put-off" to some folks.
If you're running heavy projects, Reaper is currently the most CPU efficient DAW.
Being a relatively new DAW application, Reaper devs were able to look at top features from other DAW apps... and incorporate similar features (and try to improve upon them).
Being newer, there's not decades of "legacy code" (necessary for backward compatibility) dragging down performance and bloating the size.
The company behind Reaper is in a very unique situation.
They're small/dynamic... (not a lot of red-tape to bog things down)
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fluffy_little_something fluffy_little_something https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=281847
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- 12880 posts since 5 Jun, 2012
Are all those configuration settings in a file transferable to new major versions or does one have to configure it all over again?
- KVRAF
- 40243 posts since 11 Aug, 2008 from clown world
Actually ...bazwillrun wrote:Cubase 9.5 £480.00
Reaper 5.9 £45.00
The price for starters !...
$60: discounted license
$225: commercial license
Anyone who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities.
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- KVRAF
- 5627 posts since 23 Mar, 2006 from pendeLondonmonium
Yes, it's all "transferable". You can export the whole customised Reaper 'state' and import it to another install of Reaper on a different computer.fluffy_little_something wrote:Are all those configuration settings in a file transferable to new major versions or does one have to configure it all over again?
- KVRAF
- 5405 posts since 20 Mar, 2012 from Babbleon
So, I typed these 3 words in Google: sociopath world percent
On page one of Google's results, the first article is titled "Statistics - Sociopaths"
https://eyesofasociopath.weebly.com/statistics.html
According to that article... "The sociopath makes up approximately 3 to 5 percent of the general population".
You can keep using REAPER beyond the 60-day trial and it won't be crippled in any way but if you do that then you may be a sociopath and have no conscience?
But since about 95 percent of the general population aren't sociopaths, chances are that your conscience will conclude something like "I need to pay for this great software".
Other DAWs don't test people's conscience that way because they stop working after the trial period? So maybe REAPER is successful because most people are not sociopaths. Okay, it's not the only reason, but one of many?
Other reasons for REAPER being special would be:
- it doesn't have a dedicated support department with staff that are payed to do troubleshooting.
- the helpful REAPER community is the equivalent of a support department for REAPER, it's voluntary and it's kind
- it's affordable to people on very tight budget
- it has a license that never expires (the updates do expire, but it may take many years for that to happen though, maybe as much as 5 years?)
- it's not a CPU hog
- developers themselves participate in the REAPER forums (how many developers does REAPER have anyways, I seem to be aware of only two)
- scriptwriters and other people that knows computer language(s) believe in REAPER and help people out
The above could be true of other DAWs too, I don't know, I only know that it was easier for me to just download REAPER and start using it.
No asking for your email, no activation, no registration. No hassles.
Also in my case, REAPER was mostly able to process 20,000 midi files, I had to use Midi Disassembler to complete the job. It would have probably taken me days and days and days had I had to do the processing manually (mouse clicking and all that). Pretend the job took me 8 hours to do it manually and I get paid 10 dollars per hour then REAPER has already paid for itself because $10 x 8 = 80 CAD or 60 USD.
The downside is that it took almost a month for me to understand to process my 20,000 midi files in REAPER. Usually I'm in a hurry but it's summer and I temporarily have time to take things slow and that's what I did, did things slowly. And did other stuff that had nothing to do with REAPER.
But now I have REAPER knowledge on how to process 20,000 midi files and it will be faster next time. So now, I am determined to buy REAPER 6.0, no matter what. I owe REAPER. It would be my first internet purchase. I think I have just become a REAPER fanboy. So I think that's what make REAPER special. It makes people like me who has never bought anything via the internet have a look at it and buy in the end.
On page one of Google's results, the first article is titled "Statistics - Sociopaths"
https://eyesofasociopath.weebly.com/statistics.html
According to that article... "The sociopath makes up approximately 3 to 5 percent of the general population".
You can keep using REAPER beyond the 60-day trial and it won't be crippled in any way but if you do that then you may be a sociopath and have no conscience?
But since about 95 percent of the general population aren't sociopaths, chances are that your conscience will conclude something like "I need to pay for this great software".
Other DAWs don't test people's conscience that way because they stop working after the trial period? So maybe REAPER is successful because most people are not sociopaths. Okay, it's not the only reason, but one of many?
Other reasons for REAPER being special would be:
- it doesn't have a dedicated support department with staff that are payed to do troubleshooting.
- the helpful REAPER community is the equivalent of a support department for REAPER, it's voluntary and it's kind
- it's affordable to people on very tight budget
- it has a license that never expires (the updates do expire, but it may take many years for that to happen though, maybe as much as 5 years?)
- it's not a CPU hog
- developers themselves participate in the REAPER forums (how many developers does REAPER have anyways, I seem to be aware of only two)
- scriptwriters and other people that knows computer language(s) believe in REAPER and help people out
The above could be true of other DAWs too, I don't know, I only know that it was easier for me to just download REAPER and start using it.
No asking for your email, no activation, no registration. No hassles.
Also in my case, REAPER was mostly able to process 20,000 midi files, I had to use Midi Disassembler to complete the job. It would have probably taken me days and days and days had I had to do the processing manually (mouse clicking and all that). Pretend the job took me 8 hours to do it manually and I get paid 10 dollars per hour then REAPER has already paid for itself because $10 x 8 = 80 CAD or 60 USD.
The downside is that it took almost a month for me to understand to process my 20,000 midi files in REAPER. Usually I'm in a hurry but it's summer and I temporarily have time to take things slow and that's what I did, did things slowly. And did other stuff that had nothing to do with REAPER.
But now I have REAPER knowledge on how to process 20,000 midi files and it will be faster next time. So now, I am determined to buy REAPER 6.0, no matter what. I owe REAPER. It would be my first internet purchase. I think I have just become a REAPER fanboy. So I think that's what make REAPER special. It makes people like me who has never bought anything via the internet have a look at it and buy in the end.
ah böwakawa poussé poussé
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fluffy_little_something fluffy_little_something https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=281847
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- 12880 posts since 5 Jun, 2012
That's nicehimalaya wrote:Yes, it's all "transferable". You can export the whole customised Reaper 'state' and import it to another install of Reaper on a different computer.fluffy_little_something wrote:Are all those configuration settings in a file transferable to new major versions or does one have to configure it all over again?
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fluffy_little_something fluffy_little_something https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=281847
- Banned
- 12880 posts since 5 Jun, 2012
Exactly. There are some companies who one just feels like buying from. Steinberg is not one of them in my view.harryupbabble wrote:So, I typed these 3 words in Google: sociopath world percent
On page one of Google's results, the first article is titled "Statistics - Sociopaths"
https://eyesofasociopath.weebly.com/statistics.html
According to that article... "The sociopath makes up approximately 3 to 5 percent of the general population".
You can keep using REAPER beyond the 60-day trial and it won't be crippled in any way but if you do that then you may be a sociopath and have no conscience?
But since about 95 percent of the general population aren't sociopaths, chances are that your conscience will conclude something like "I need to pay for this great software".
I am basically waiting for v6.0 now, don't want to buy v5.92 at the full price. (I know it is not expensive anyway, but then again, I am using Mulab so far, which is about the same price new, but upgrades for existing customers are very affordable. And like Cockos MuTools is a developer who deserves my money, so to speak.)