Native Instruments Komplete 26 released
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- KVRian
- 582 posts since 20 Jun, 2005
I'd say that it will be business as usual:
Step 1: Lay Offs
Step 2: Sunsetting of non profit products (bye Reaktor, I guess).
Step 3: Repeat step 1 & 2 until profit.
That's the gist of it, IMHO.
Step 1: Lay Offs
Step 2: Sunsetting of non profit products (bye Reaktor, I guess).
Step 3: Repeat step 1 & 2 until profit.
That's the gist of it, IMHO.
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- KVRian
- 801 posts since 26 Aug, 2005 from Oregon, USA
That also happens in companies that are not purchased....
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- KVRAF
- 2756 posts since 24 Nov, 2023
NI didn't make their own branded controllers. They were made by outsourced factories in Shenzhen, China. They did however maintain an office in Shenzhen to oversee thatsimon.a.billington wrote: Mon May 18, 2026 5:55 am Speculating as usual, but I can see that maybe the NI hardware may and up being integrated and/or manufactured by one of their other hardware orientated brands such as Akai or Denon.
If it helps to keep production costs down and maximising profit the would seem very much like a move an umbrella corp would make, but it actually may be for the better in the long run
InMusic also doesn't have its own factories and also outsources all of its manufacturing to various facilities in China
The brand name on NI or various inMusic brands doesn't really mean anything as far as who makes it
So I could definitely see Akai branded controllers that work with Komplete Kontrol as well as having Komplete Control functionality built into the MPC line, and I could also see the Komplete Kontrol branding dropped for something Akai branded
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- KVRian
- 582 posts since 20 Jun, 2005
LOL
That's what "business as usual" means...
I can't believe I have to explain this...
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simon.a.billington simon.a.billington https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=341278
- KVRAF
- 2577 posts since 12 Nov, 2014
Yeah that makes sense. And by having folks at Akai do it means that NI could effectively dump their whole hardware department. With a few key individuals crossing over to work at Akai.IvyBirds wrote: Mon May 18, 2026 5:40 pmNI didn't make their own branded controllers. They were made by outsourced factories in Shenzhen, China. They did however maintain an office in Shenzhen to oversee thatsimon.a.billington wrote: Mon May 18, 2026 5:55 am Speculating as usual, but I can see that maybe the NI hardware may and up being integrated and/or manufactured by one of their other hardware orientated brands such as Akai or Denon.
If it helps to keep production costs down and maximising profit the would seem very much like a move an umbrella corp would make, but it actually may be for the better in the long run
InMusic also doesn't have its own factories and also outsources all of its manufacturing to various facilities in China
The brand name on NI or various inMusic brands doesn't really mean anything as far as who makes it
So I could definitely see Akai branded controllers that work with Komplete Kontrol as well as having Komplete Control functionality built into the MPC line, and I could also see the Komplete Kontrol branding dropped for something Akai branded
It's all very possible
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Loudness_Contour Loudness_Contour https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=447375
- KVRist
- 82 posts since 4 Sep, 2019
I was going to upgrade, then I realized Ozone and other iZotope products were downgraded from Standard to Elelements and I changed my mind. They should at least offer Standard in Collector and Ultimate.
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- KVRian
- 1043 posts since 17 Mar, 2005 from Bay Area
When a company doing regular product releases using ascending alpha/numeric model numbers or collections, etc, suddenly jumps the tracks and reboots that well-known numbering scheme to try to be EVEN MORE relevant, it usually means the company is dying. And since we already know they are dying, this suggests they are continuing to die.
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- KVRAF
- 9521 posts since 6 Oct, 2004
The premise of Komplete should be to add some products that are new, but beyond the initial release sales response. Removing or downgrading products that were in previous versions makes no sense. 
