some are cheap guys who dosent have a lot of money and buy only required plugins(so reaper is the only option)Azura wrote:Well I started this thread not to have opinions about why Reaper (or any other DAW) is crap or is a godsend (there are enough threads about it), but to try to understand why it seems that opinions are more polarized compared to other DAWs. whyterabbyt gave some clues based on historical reasons and it makes sense. The customiztion capabilities seem to be also a part of the answer - some see that as a clear advantage to get a very efficient workflow, while some others see that as lack of uniformity. The GUI is also a valid point. It is extremely subjective (I personnaly really like Reaper's GUI), but I can understand that one may not like it. Fascinating, really.
Marc
some like are "lets get the big guns" and buy protools with HDX or cubase with VEpro or ableton with ozone
and lastely
the industry guy who buys software according to the industry he/she is willing to go(few years ago it was Nuendo but......)
an image form requirement section of sound dept. in cd projekt for their new game "cyberpunk 2077"
again reaper
and the band guy (earlier it was sonar now they either use mixbus or reaper)
so when you have these guys clash on which is the best daw
you will have people having their own reason like
1.reaper is is cheap and stable
2.ableton is used by skrillex
3.jay hardway uses FL
4.my company is using reaper for making the best games in the world
5.for score writing cubase is the classical choice
you can clearly divide the producer community based on the daw they use
you can not have a guy who follows both Hinduism + Muslim(uses both daw for midi+audio and all other stuff equally) or something of that sort
he can be converted(or baptized)(the daw switching guy)
or may be (specially in india) a Muslim guy speaking hindi("fl for midi and cubase for arrangement" aka the Rewire type guy) you will have polarization
so ..... thats all