Ableton Live 10 & Jbridge
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- KVRAF
- 5851 posts since 9 Jul, 2002 from Helsinki
Nobody gives a shit about 32 bits anything in 2020.
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- KVRAF
- 35679 posts since 11 Apr, 2010 from Germany
Yep.
If anyone actually gave a shit all the DAW's wouldn't get rid of it anyway. Yes yes, I know. "Corporate decisions". Yes yes. That's why they do data metrics. Because it's all "corporate decisions". Yes yes.
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- KVRAF
- 5200 posts since 17 Aug, 2004
Works 100% - used it for years. On various plugins (some 100 different plugins).218 wrote: Wed Aug 12, 2020 8:13 am Hey All
Does anyone here have experience with Live 10 and Jbridge? Does it work properly or it is ´shoot in the dark´on which plugs might or might not work? Im considering updating from Live Suite 9, but I have numerous 32 bit plugs that I dont wanna part with.
Thanks
Price for Jbridge is ridiculously cheap. People complain here but in reality they are just sadly confused sad people not having enough of brain.
99.99% of these people spend 15 EUR on weekly basis on something flooded with sugar like Coca Cola (or put some trash food here).
Go figure
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- KVRAF
- 1524 posts since 6 Nov, 2012
I don't know who sadly confused sad people not having enough of brain or this guy is talking about, but one thing that is obvious to the world is the company who are having hundreds of employee and selling $800 software can't even program lines of code that one developer can program for 15 EUR. Or didn't even try to our source. This lack of consideration and incompetence is clear as day and no one could defend this except some noisy fanboys who are limit testing how far their mental gymnastic can go.
- Beware the Quoth
- 35478 posts since 4 Sep, 2001 from R'lyeh Oceanic Amusement Park and Funfair
Nah, the one thing that is obvious to the world that can actually reason properly is that they may or may not be able to program 'lines of code' that 'one developer can program for 15 EUR', but the fact that they haven't is only evidence of the fact that they haven't, not evidence that they can't.tooneba wrote: Mon Dec 14, 2020 12:45 pm I don't know who sadly confused sad people not having enough of brain or this guy is talking about, but one thing that is obvious to the world is the company who are having hundreds of employee and selling $800 software can't even program lines of code that one developer can program for 15 EUR. Or didn't even try to our source. This lack of consideration and incompetence is clear as day and no one could defend this except some noisy fanboys who are limit testing how far their mental gymnastic can go.
An idiot on Set Theory:
"In some cases there is an object called red that contains everything that is red. In much the same way a pot is a plate."
"In some cases there is an object called red that contains everything that is red. In much the same way a pot is a plate."
- Beware the Quoth
- 35478 posts since 4 Sep, 2001 from R'lyeh Oceanic Amusement Park and Funfair
Also, not so keen on the argument that wealthy companies should be driving innovative small developers out of the market just to fulfill the FRs of any rando.
An idiot on Set Theory:
"In some cases there is an object called red that contains everything that is red. In much the same way a pot is a plate."
"In some cases there is an object called red that contains everything that is red. In much the same way a pot is a plate."
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- KVRian
- 1286 posts since 7 Dec, 2013 from Earth
Why would they waste valuable time developing a bit bridge for only a handful of users still using 32 bit plugins? Makes absolutely no sense.
Steinberg used to have their own bit bridge in Cubase but they dropped it since v9 because as any sensible company they want to focus on 64 bit only.
Even in a DAW that supports both 64 and 32 bit plugins I would only use 64 bit plugins, because a bit bridge is a waste of CPU power.
I bet most people complaining about no 32 bit support use very old 32 bit versions of plugins because there's no new 64 bit pirated version (for example: Nexus 2). Too bad for them, my purchased 64 bit Nexus 3 works just fine
Yep, even Nexus is 64 bit only now 
Steinberg used to have their own bit bridge in Cubase but they dropped it since v9 because as any sensible company they want to focus on 64 bit only.
Even in a DAW that supports both 64 and 32 bit plugins I would only use 64 bit plugins, because a bit bridge is a waste of CPU power.
I bet most people complaining about no 32 bit support use very old 32 bit versions of plugins because there's no new 64 bit pirated version (for example: Nexus 2). Too bad for them, my purchased 64 bit Nexus 3 works just fine
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- KVRist
- 55 posts since 10 Nov, 2005 from Earth
What an interesting thread this has become. I am a nexus2 license owner as well and have been since 2010. I've purchased many of their expansions and enjoyed using the synthesizer in my projects. I also own vanguard which I purchased as well. In fact, everything I use is properly licensed including rob papen synthesizers, applied acoustics, Gforce software, Many versions of Ableton Live, ik multimedia, and native instruments to name a few.
Several of my older plugins that I have legitimately purchased like Atomic for example are from companies that went under (AlgoMusic) so there is no prospect of getting a 64 bit Updated version of that because the owner passed away. I do pay for the tools I use whether it's software or hardware so making an assumption that I want 32 bit because I'm pirating vst plugins is a baseless generalization, but I can only speak for myself. And by the way i also recently bought Nexus3 using their holiday pricing, and also purchased a new well equipped dell computer capable of running 64 bit and anything i throw at it. So my frustration comes from the perspective of being a loyal return customer for all these organizations I do business with and paying up each time there was a new version and/or new functionality I wanted. Luckily i still have my windows 7 computer with live 8 activated on it along with Various 32 bit vst's. Time to get those projects finished up and move on.
Several of my older plugins that I have legitimately purchased like Atomic for example are from companies that went under (AlgoMusic) so there is no prospect of getting a 64 bit Updated version of that because the owner passed away. I do pay for the tools I use whether it's software or hardware so making an assumption that I want 32 bit because I'm pirating vst plugins is a baseless generalization, but I can only speak for myself. And by the way i also recently bought Nexus3 using their holiday pricing, and also purchased a new well equipped dell computer capable of running 64 bit and anything i throw at it. So my frustration comes from the perspective of being a loyal return customer for all these organizations I do business with and paying up each time there was a new version and/or new functionality I wanted. Luckily i still have my windows 7 computer with live 8 activated on it along with Various 32 bit vst's. Time to get those projects finished up and move on.
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- KVRAF
- 1526 posts since 23 Feb, 2017
Ableton probably don’t want to keep supporting something that’s obsolete, that’s all. Especially when another developer already makes and updates a bridge.
Signatures are so early 2000s.
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- KVRian
- 1286 posts since 7 Dec, 2013 from Earth
Well, jBridge is a great solution for those 32 bit plugins. I also own a jBridge license which I purchased about 5 years ago when I made the switch to 64 bit. I've used it for about a year and it served me well, but since then I completely switched to 64 bit plugins only. I don't even have it installed anymore since I purchased a new computer in 2018.infrared72 wrote: Mon Dec 14, 2020 3:34 pm What an interesting thread this has become. I am a nexus2 license owner as well and have been since 2010. I've purchased many of their expansions and enjoyed using the synthesizer in my projects. I also own vanguard which I purchased as well. In fact, everything I use is properly licensed including rob papen synthesizers, applied acoustics, Gforce software, Many versions of Ableton Live, ik multimedia, and native instruments to name a few.
Several of my older plugins that I have legitimately purchased like Atomic for example are from companies that went under (AlgoMusic) so there is no prospect of getting a 64 bit Updated version of that because the owner passed away. I do pay for the tools I use whether it's software or hardware so making an assumption that I want 32 bit because I'm pirating vst plugins is a baseless generalization, but I can only speak for myself. And by the way i also recently bought Nexus3 using their holiday pricing, and also purchased a new well equipped dell computer capable of running 64 bit and anything i throw at it. So my frustration comes from the perspective of being a loyal return customer for all these organizations I do business with and paying up each time there was a new version and/or new functionality I wanted. Luckily i still have my windows 7 computer with live 8 activated on it along with Various 32 bit vst's. Time to get those projects finished up and move on.
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- KVRAF
- 1524 posts since 6 Nov, 2012
I have no obligation to give them beneficial of the doubt because I already paid fair share of the cost which are arguably enough to program bit bridge themselves or out source. But the developer couldn't manage to get it done because of incompetence of company. "can't" doesn't necessarily mean developers are lacking the skill to do things. Read what I wrote again. The subject is the bold part. Not developers.whyterabbyt wrote: Mon Dec 14, 2020 1:13 pmNah, the one thing that is obvious to the world that can actually reason properly is that they may or may not be able to program 'lines of code' that 'one developer can program for 15 EUR', but the fact that they haven't is only evidence of the fact that they haven't, not evidence that they can't.tooneba wrote: Mon Dec 14, 2020 12:45 pm I don't know who sadly confused sad people not having enough of brain or this guy is talking about, but one thing that is obvious to the world is the company who are having hundreds of employee and selling $800 software can't even program lines of code that one developer can program for 15 EUR. Or didn't even try to our source. This lack of consideration and incompetence is clear as day and no one could defend this except some noisy fanboys who are limit testing how far their mental gymnastic can go.
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- KVRAF
- 1524 posts since 6 Nov, 2012
You just ignored the later part of "program or outsource" for the sake of your argument. Outsourcing brings money to small innovative developers.whyterabbyt wrote: Mon Dec 14, 2020 1:15 pm Also, not so keen on the argument that wealthy companies should be driving innovative small developers out of the market just to fulfill the FRs of any rando.