How is that a problem? The last version of Orion was released in 2011 but, 12.5 years later, I am still using it on a regular basis and it all still works just as well as it ever did.dellboy wrote: Sun Mar 17, 2024 1:22 pmIts not so much about upgrades,but more about being able to continue using what you already have.
Or keep using the current version. Nobody is putting a gun to your head and forcing you to upgrade and Studio One is certainly mature enough, sufficiently full-featured, that you don't actually need to upgrade. My bandmate uses Cubase most of the time and he's perfectly happy with his current version, 10.5, which is now 3 or 4 years out of date.My main DAW is Studio One, and assuming that the information is correct, Presonus will be forced to stop using VST2's in future DAW updates. So if I want to continue using VST2's (and I do), I will have no other option but to find a DAW that supports CLAP to continue using them.
BA-1 already has all the features I want, I'd get by without any upgrades. There is certainly nothing in the recent 1.5 upgrade that I'd have paid money for.machinesworking wrote: Sun Mar 17, 2024 6:06 pmThis isn't about "right now" it's about when BA-1 gets updated with features you want that are only available in VST 3.
And I'm not sure why you think it matters in the slightest. There was a time when new and upgraded instruments were worth having but sound quality has now got to a point where I don't feel like it can get meaningfully better so upgrades become a luxury, not the necessity they once felt like.I'm not sure why you're missing that point?
Why? I could still be using Orion now if that mattered. It was only by looking into things for reasons completely unrelated to actually doing anything that I realised that Studio One's PR wasn't as good as Orion's, so why would I care if they added features I didn't even realise it was missing?Same thing applies to Studio One, if the next version has piano roll features that you loved in Orion you will want to move to that version.
Actually, in the last 10 years I have upgraded my laptop around 12 times. But that's purely about taking advantage of bargains and selling older ones while they are still current models, to maximise their sale price. It's about saving money (or spending it a bit more wisely).I mean you're really just begging the question here, you've upgraded your laptop at least three times in the last ten years
Of course, I can easily turn this around - you don't upgrade your laptop every time a new model is released, so why do you feel the need to upgrade your software all the time?
Interestingly, the reason we decided to make the move was largely because Korg only released ARP Odyssey as VST3 and I really wanted that plugin. However, having seen how much I sacrificed for that, I very quickly came to wonder why I had gone to all that trouble and expense because it turned out to be a pretty poor decision that cost me a lot in time and effort for what was basically f**k-all benefit (and Korg eventually did a VST2 version anyway). It really wouldn't take much to get me back using Orion full-time, it's only our new album that wasn't originally made in it, so the amount of work would be a lot less than the work I did moving away from it. But it is that experience which informs my current attitude in this scenario - decide in haste, repent at leisure.... and flatly moved to Studio One from Orion, if you apply the logic you're applying to this concern for VST3 being pushed on us, you would have never changed platforms or hardware.
