Except Apple prove amply that successful companies have no compunction when it comes to deprecating features if it saves them money and increases their profit. And that's the irony of all of you arguing about this - you're all Mac users and Apple is the absolute worst for this, yet you don't stop using their products. That makes you all massive hypocrites.machinesworking wrote: Mon Sep 13, 2021 7:57 amOthers are arguing that regardless of that, at some point even Windows deprecates and renders useless old drivers, some things become abandonware etc. and it's best to stick with companies that are healthy so you don't lose things.
But if you have your priorities right, it is actually a reason not to buy an M1 Mac, not a reason to avoid Roli.This of course is very true of people looking to buy an M1 Mac considering Roli might go under before they make drivers for Apple Silicon etc.
So what? It cost you f**k-all so it doesn't take too long to get to the point where you can be happy you've got your money's worth from it. With my MIDIsport, I reached that point probably 18 years ago. If the day comes when it stops working, although I'd put money on the fact it won't, I'd be in awe of the value I got from it because, frankly, I expected it to stop working after Avid acquired MIDIman and rebranded everything as M-Audio. OTOH, If I lived to be 100 and sold 5 million albums, I'd still not feel that I'd gotten my money's worth from a $3000 RME interface. And that's my point - you are absolutely not getting your money's worth when you pay that sort of money for that sort of product. There may be ways to justify that sort of expense but this definitely isn't one of them.I have a Midisport 4x4 as backup for my MTP/AV here, and it works even though it's not officially supported, the driver for the newer hardware works fine with it, but I in no way would want to 100% trust that it's going to work for much longer. That's all anyone is trying to point out, that you're living on the edge when you use drivers that haven't been updated in 8 years for deprecated hardware. There's not a chance in hell it will get a new one from M-Audio for instance if Windows 11 breaks it.
Those interfaces are priced for the professional market, studios, where you can recoup your money over time by charging people to use the equipment and where any downtime will cost you money. For the hobbyist or home studio, they are massive overkill. RME probably hate having to deal with consumers, so they deliberately try to price themselves out of that market.
