To me that is utter madness. You are compromising on your tools for the sake of an OS. It's arse-backwards. You choose your tools and then pick the OS that best supports those choices. Anything else is selling yourself and your work short. The OS isn't important, it's just there to support your applications and it should stay out of the way when you're working.D-Fusion wrote: Thu Feb 19, 2026 11:11 pmI stopped using the DAW instead and use the other DAW I own that works great on Linux![]()
Spare me f**king days. If you need your software companies to make you feel good, there is something deeply, fundamentally wrong with you. I just need the tools that best suit my workflow and my goals. Everything else is just bullshit.Touch The Universe wrote: Thu Feb 19, 2026 11:30 pm Supporting Linux users might serve fewer people overall, but it would create a deeper kind of happiness. And that depth matters. When people feel genuinely valued, they don’t just quietly appreciate it — they talk about it.
They're idiots. I'd be far more likely to be on board with a DAW that was only developed for a single platform, for the simple reason it would be much better for that kind of focus, able to take advantage of OS-specific features that may not be compatible in a cross-platform environment. e.g. People hate the layout of some of Synapse Audio's older VSTi because they are constrained by the need to be compatible with Reason's RE format. With a small team, they didn't have the resources to make multiple versions for different platforms, so everyone had to put up with the most restrictive version. They got around that eventually but there was a cost, in that development is much slower now. It's the classic "jack of all trades, master of none" scenario.They recommend it. They defend it.