Two weeks, three years - makes sod all difference to the end user does it? Point is VST3 is MIT licensed now, same as CLAP. License advantage: none.
Right, because Pro Tools uses AAX (proprietary Avid format) and Logic uses AU (Apple's format). CLAP doesn't work in those either, does it? So how's CLAP solving that problem exactly?whyterabbyt wrote: Wed Nov 05, 2025 1:59 pmVST3 doesnt work in ProTools, which matters in recording studios and postproduction, and it doesnt work in Garageband or Logic, which matters on Mac.
"When." Lovely word that. Ableton's shown zero indication they're supporting CLAP anytime soon. You're banking on hypotheticals whilst VST3 works in everything *today*.whyterabbyt wrote: Wed Nov 05, 2025 1:59 pmEspecially when Ableton implement CLAP support. And JUCE 9 gets released.
Missed the point entirely. If a developer only releases CLAP, they've excluded their plugin from working in Ableton, Cubase, and half the industry. That's limiting *their* market, not the user's choice.whyterabbyt wrote: Wed Nov 05, 2025 1:59 pmBecause everyone downloads the plugin formats they cant use, right?
VST3 was released in 2008. VST2 came out in 1999 - nine years prior. That's called evolution, not fragmentation. CLAP in 2022 added a fourth format when three already existed. That's just making a mess.
You've basically admitted CLAP only exists because Steinberg were being difficult about licensing? Now they're not. Job done. Move on.
