Nice response.jojoB3 wrote: Sat Apr 25, 2026 10:02 pm This was the biggest piece of AVID BORN BS I've read to date.
You're/they're YEARS late (and $1200/yr short).
Other than your distain for Avid, what about my post was BS?
I can't wait to hear the actual details.
If you're not playing/recording in your basement/bedroom, (actually working with professional musicians at a commercial recording studio), odds are extremely high that the studio is using ProTools.
Though I have them all, why in the world would I use Nuendo, Logic, Reaper, Live, Studio Pro, etc?
That would be a significant waste of time/energy... converting projects back/forth.
What would be the gain? Give me the details of why I should not be using ProTools.
Because you don't like the price?
I'm well aware (especially on the native side) it took Avid a long while feature-wise to catch up.
ie: ProTools was the last major DAW application to have 32Bit Float support.
For years, ProTools didn't have offline bouncedown.
In 2026, that's not the case.
ProTools is CPU efficient (especially compared to Cubase/Nuendo).
ProTools is rock-solid stable.
ProTools has lots of refinements that make professional use nice.
Using a UF8 (HUI) and Streamdeck XL, navigation is extremely quick.
With Carbon, I monitor DSP processed audio with sub 1ms latency.
ProTools is expensive. In my case, Ultimate perpetual license came with Carbon.
If you're not using an Avid interface, your audio is not placed in proper time on the timeline.
You (unfortunately) have to manually correct for that.
ProTools should have a Record Offset parameter. Having to deal with that in 2026 is BS.
If you're got a DAW controller or Streamdeck, you can set-up a single button-press to correct.
I got Carbon specifically for this reason (no Record Offset).
What's really BS is someone spewing regurgitated vitriol... when they don't understand the full context of said work. Whether you like it or not, ProTools Ultimate allows me (and others) to work fast, get things accomplished, and collaborate very effectively.
ie: Instead of dragging half a dozen keyboards to the recording studio, I bring a small SSD to the session. My parts are instantly imported (no conversion necessary).
I've got multiple takes as options, different sounds/parts, MIDI and audio.
Extremely efficient use of studio time (which is far more expensive than $1200/year)!
The engineer loves it, and most importantly... the Songwriter paying for everything loves it.
I love it... because it's efficient use of MY time.
Could I have recorded my parts in another DAW application?
Obviously.
Would it be faster or more efficient in any other DAW application?
For this scenario, the answer is just as obvious. No.
If there was a better solution, I'd be using it.
Now... let's hear that breadth of insight/knowledge on what I should be doing.
My guess is Reaper.