Well this is a kick in the nuts: VST2 plug-ins
- KVRAF
- 12741 posts since 24 Jun, 2008 from Europe
The fact that Steinberg tries to force the death of VST 2 proves the current weakness of VST 3. At least it gives that impression. Aggressively killing VST 2 will definitely hurt many many users. There are still millions of projects out there made with (legacy) VST 2 plugins. This aggressive kill of VST 2 only radiates negativity. And this negativity will radiate to Steinberg. Better that Steinberg chooses positivity: Further improve VST 3 where necessary and let VST 2 peacefully live in public domain. Maybe as 'read-only' (eg. no modifications allowed) so that the Steinberg stamp will forever be in the VST 2 headers and will forever be a prove of Steinberg's innovative role in the music tech industry. It's about positivity. And about loving music creation. Important assets.
- Rad Grandad
- 38044 posts since 6 Sep, 2003 from Downeast Maine
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- KVRAF
- 15517 posts since 13 Oct, 2009
I didn't say that I disagreed that it was in their best interest, only that I think that they do. Of course, there's no such thing as public domain with restrictions, so I assume that one means open source? My guess though is that anything short of permissively licensed at this point is too little too late.mutools wrote: ↑Wed Apr 21, 2021 11:15 pm The fact that Steinberg tries to force the death of VST 2 proves the current weakness of VST 3. At least it gives that impression. Aggressively killing VST 2 will definitely hurt many many users. There are still millions of projects out there made with (legacy) VST 2 plugins. This aggressive kill of VST 2 only radiates negativity. And this negativity will radiate to Steinberg. Better that Steinberg chooses positivity: Further improve VST 3 where necessary and let VST 2 peacefully live in public domain. Maybe as 'read-only' (eg. no modifications allowed) so that the Steinberg stamp will forever be in the VST 2 headers and will forever be a prove of Steinberg's innovative role in the music tech industry. It's about positivity. And about loving music creation. Important assets.
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Super Piano Hater 64 Super Piano Hater 64 https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=491312
- KVRist
- 376 posts since 24 Jan, 2021
They can be persuaded that they have miscalculated their options, and incentivized to consider a change of plans. Maybe not with a fountain of bodily fluids, but something a little scarier: Collective bargaining. Set up an organization representing a whole bunch of smaller shops, outlining a pact to (for example) withdraw VST3 support over ethical concerns if Steinberg continues to threaten the industry with its monopolistic behavior. Offer to disband the organization if Steinberg donates VST2 to the public domain (or releases it under the GPL or MIT or whatever libre license). Keep lawyers on standby to take them to court for a class action lawsuit and/or an antitrust investigation.ghettosynth wrote: ↑Wed Apr 21, 2021 10:55 pmWell that idea is pretty obvious, no? I mean I'm pretty sure that it has occurred to a a few people at Steinberg. I'm also pretty certain that they disagree about it being their "best option."
This cannot be done except by industry insiders, and I'm not one myself, so that's as far as I can take this idea. I don't really expect anyone to try it, either, because it will be less of a hassle to let Steinberg do whatever it pleases. Larger developers will quietly take it in the shorts as a cost of doing business. Smaller developers will switch to LV2 with all its problems. VST2 will wither and disappear.
I hate signatures too.
- Banned
- 9087 posts since 15 Oct, 2017 from U.S.
- KVRian
- 1253 posts since 31 Dec, 2008
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- KVRist
- 167 posts since 12 May, 2012
you're right of course. i blew off the steam and thought about it all again. i decided that my reaction to this situation was not unjustified, but i definitely could have avoided being rude a bit better. i was seeing redHink wrote: ↑Wed Apr 21, 2021 9:05 pmby calling people dorks? That's right, it's all of us and not you...gotcha.kamalmanzukie wrote: ↑Wed Apr 21, 2021 7:04 pmwhen in rome baby.
honestly all i was trying to do was drum up some testosterone about the situation, but since the mood seems to be 'shut up, we like it' i'll just see myself out
"when in rome baby. " and "since the mood seems to be 'shut up"
when in rome baby
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- KVRist
- 167 posts since 12 May, 2012
if they don't understand that as an unavoidable concession something is very wrong with that company and their grip on reality. what else is for there to happen? im not a lawyer or anything but if they think railroading everyone like this is the way to go, that sounds like the basis for one hell of a class action lawsuit. maybe they're not a monopoly technically, but acting like one for however many years in good faith only to pull this strong arm stuff that will leave a lot of people high and dry no matter whatUrs wrote: ↑Wed Apr 21, 2021 7:17 pm Well, you know, I think it's pretty clear that a de facto industry standard must not be subject to a license that can be revoked unilaterally by one of the players in that industry.
Many of us are heavily invested in this, musicians, host developers and plug-in developers. The lesson to learn here is that ownership of a proprietary format is threatening that investment, for what we can only assume is shareholder value of no benefit to anyone's sacrifice.
Therefore, I think this needs to end. I think Steinberg's best option is to place VST2.4 in the public domain.
idiots probably wouldn't even see it coming. i bet they're doing cocaine
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Music Engineer Music Engineer https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=15959
- KVRAF
- 4292 posts since 8 Mar, 2004 from Berlin, Germany
this is what i have been thinking for many years. it would certainly be the best option for the audiosoftware community and it would give a huge positive image boost to steinberg. they could make themselves the heroes of the industry. apparently, for whatever reasons that i don't understand, steinberg seems to think otherwise. if only they could be persuaded
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excuse me please excuse me please https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=427648
- KVRAF
- 1631 posts since 10 Oct, 2018
Steinberg=Yamaha
There you have your reason. Watch Jordan Rudess' latest home studio video (from last week). No cigar for Yamaha!
There you have your reason. Watch Jordan Rudess' latest home studio video (from last week). No cigar for Yamaha!
- KVRAF
- 1748 posts since 2 Jul, 2018
100% agreed. After more than a decade VST3 still has not replaced VST2. And there are serious reasons for this. Steinberg should just accept the reality. Instead of investing money into threatening developers with legal issues Steinberg should just:
- fix the badly designed VST3 SDK or replace it with VST4 (lightweight and simple)
- leave VST 2.4 to public domain to restore the reputation amongst developers and customers
Since Steinberg is a German company we developers could also refer to the Bundeskartellamt. It cares about abuse of monopoly:
https://www.bundeskartellamt.de/DE/Miss ... _node.html
- u-he
- 28065 posts since 8 Aug, 2002 from Berlin
Honestly, I don't think they can. They're probably too hung up on shareholder value and they cling to the paradigm that 3 companies control all relevant standards, the top spot being the icing on the cake.
But things can change quickly if only someone was gonna take any of the existing open source APIs and create an example implementation that allows for a quick transition. Like, a step-by-step guide on how to throw out the VST2 SDK and make an *implementation* of VST2 independent of VST2. Something that takes no longer than half a day, from throwing out the VST2 SDK to compiling the thing.
Then, all you need is an adapter to VST2 and you're set forever. Also, why not throw in an adapter for VST3 under GPLv3, too, for good measure and as a hosting example, and be done with signing those license agreements.
- KVRian
- 1253 posts since 31 Dec, 2008
Probably many here want this but are afraid to be the one to do it. I guess its the unknown details of legality that is the most deterrent for most of us.Urs wrote: ↑Thu Apr 22, 2021 6:42 am But things can change quickly if only someone was gonna take any of the existing open source APIs and create an example implementation that allows for a quick transition. Like, a step-by-step guide on how to throw out the VST2 SDK and make an *implementation* of VST2 independent of VST2. Something that takes no longer than half a day, from throwing out the VST2 SDK to compiling the thing.
Then, all you need is an adapter to VST2 and you're set forever.
May be if a good lawyer is involved in the process. After all, so called "clean room" reverse engineering has been already done before for things that are much much more sophisticated than mere VST 2. (example, IBM's BIOS, or even ReactOS)
www.solostuff.net
Advice is heavy. So don’t send it like a mountain.
Advice is heavy. So don’t send it like a mountain.
- KVRAF
- 2243 posts since 25 Sep, 2014 from Specific Northwest
There was a project where the programmer who had never even seen the VST headers black boxed a VST and recreated the whole shebang. However, I can no longer find it, nor did I download a copy of it, as far as I can see.S0lo wrote: ↑Fri Apr 23, 2021 3:48 amProbably many here want this but are afraid to be the one to do it. I guess its the unknown details of legality that is the most deterrent for most of us.Urs wrote: ↑Thu Apr 22, 2021 6:42 am But things can change quickly if only someone was gonna take any of the existing open source APIs and create an example implementation that allows for a quick transition. Like, a step-by-step guide on how to throw out the VST2 SDK and make an *implementation* of VST2 independent of VST2. Something that takes no longer than half a day, from throwing out the VST2 SDK to compiling the thing.
Then, all you need is an adapter to VST2 and you're set forever.
May be if a good lawyer is involved in the process. After all, so called "clean room" reverse engineering has been already done before for things that are much much more sophisticated than mere VST 2. (example, IBM's BIOS, or even ReactOS)
Pity as it would have been an excellent starting point. I can only guess that they received a takedown notice and didn't feel like fighting it.
I started on Logic 5 with a PowerBook G4 550Mhz. I now have a MacBook Air M1 and it's ~165x faster! So, why is my music not proportionally better?
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- KVRAF
- 15517 posts since 13 Oct, 2009