But that's an image, not the definition of the term; I don't think the definition of the term computer has changed since then. Sorry to seem pedantic, but you'd probably feel the same were you trying to comprehend and express yourself in a language that is foreign to you, and they kept on changing meaning and rules on you all the time.Meffy wrote:A computer is a room full of refrigerator-sized boxes laden with whirling tape reels, attended by lab-coated priests and priestesses. That's what it meant when I was young, so that's what it means now no matter what else has changed. You wouldn't call a little box on your desk a computer, or a folding thing with built-in keyboard and display, or a pocket-sized device.
Record: New DAW from Propellerheads
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- KVRAF
- 1894 posts since 19 Apr, 2006 from Montreal, Canada
No, that wasn't me.
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- Skunk Mod
- 21249 posts since 10 Jun, 2004 from Pony Pasture
Then take "recorder." One box with two whirling reels. You can't call a tiny RAM-based hand-held item a recorder. Or an applet that runs on a computer.
Or a spreadsheet. They're made of paper, not digital data cells. Start calling a computer program a spreadsheet and soon language will have lost all meaning.
Or a calendar. They're paper too. A calculator is made of sector wheels and pawls and registers, not bits. And on and on.
Or a spreadsheet. They're made of paper, not digital data cells. Start calling a computer program a spreadsheet and soon language will have lost all meaning.
Or a calendar. They're paper too. A calculator is made of sector wheels and pawls and registers, not bits. And on and on.
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Stupid American Pig Stupid American Pig https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=4753
- KVRAF
- 7065 posts since 25 Nov, 2002 from not sure
Its good to read that coming from you.blank/diod wrote:No, it was a comment on the irony of Record/Reason sharing a key with VST plugins, it's kinda like shoving a bunch of cats and dogs into a small room and closing the door.koolkeys wrote:And are you saying that you don't want multiple products on a single key?
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- KVRAF
- 1894 posts since 19 Apr, 2006 from Montreal, Canada
I've spend the last hour looking at video of the new props product, and I fail to see who their main target audience is.
In one video, they keep saying "it's for musician, not engineer", but then they present to us this gigantic SSE console that would be intimidating even to a budding engineer studying audio at university level. How does that fit?
So, you say to yourself "self, it's for musicians with advance knowledge in audio recording and manipulation". But then, what hit you is that it doesn't have the features that would attract a musician with advance knowledge in audio recording and manipulation.
Maybe I should find a way to get the demo instead of relying on videos, but I get the feeling it isn't for me and, furthermore, I really can't get who this product is made for?
In one video, they keep saying "it's for musician, not engineer", but then they present to us this gigantic SSE console that would be intimidating even to a budding engineer studying audio at university level. How does that fit?
So, you say to yourself "self, it's for musicians with advance knowledge in audio recording and manipulation". But then, what hit you is that it doesn't have the features that would attract a musician with advance knowledge in audio recording and manipulation.
Maybe I should find a way to get the demo instead of relying on videos, but I get the feeling it isn't for me and, furthermore, I really can't get who this product is made for?
No, that wasn't me.
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- KVRAF
- 16154 posts since 2 Dec, 2003 from Nashville, TN
Tell me about it! I don't understand how anyone has figured this out yet. I don't even think the Props know.bullshark wrote:I've spend the last hour looking at video of the new props product, and I fail to see who their main target audience is.
I mentioned this exact point earlier in this thread, but it seemingly got glazed over. Propellerheads have an identity crisis with Record. It's for the musician, but focuses heavily on the one staple of any recording engineer's work. They don't even know their own product's focus apparently.In one video, they keep saying "it's for musician, not engineer", but then they present to us this gigantic SSE console that would be intimidating even to a budding engineer studying audio at university level. How does that fit?
What's ironic is that they say it's for musicians, but almost nothing in there is actually focused on musicians except for the fact that it records audio and it has a sample player(in which the sounds aren't even that great really). How is that different than any other host out there(I use the term "host" lightly in the comparison)?So, you say to yourself "self, it's for musicians with advance knowledge in audio recording and manipulation". But then, what hit you is that it doesn't have the features that would attract a musician with advance knowledge in audio recording and manipulation.
Hey, if you think the REAPER workflow is bad, wait till you try Record! LOL!Maybe I should find a way to get the demo instead of relying on videos, but I get the feeling it isn't for me and, furthermore, I really can't get who this product is made for?
Brent
My host is better than your host
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- KVRAF
- 5200 posts since 17 Aug, 2004
I really liked video with Dave Spoon on Props site. I am sure he have ton of pro work (i did not check but i am sure) but this is just too funny. He is talking all over the place about "nasty" sound..... and then he hit play
- classic
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- KVRAF
- 1894 posts since 19 Apr, 2006 from Montreal, Canada
Yeah, it's almost as if they took everything that musicians hate and thrown that in, and then they took everything that engineers needs and took that out and then called it a day.koolkeys wrote:What's ironic is that they say it's for musicians, but almost nothing in there is actually focused on musicians except for the fact that it records audio and it has a sample player(in which the sounds aren't even that great really). How is that different than any other host out there(I use the term "host" lightly in the comparison)?
Repeating something, like "it's made for musicians", ad nauseam does not make it true if it's untrue.
The interface is consistent with their other product thought, gotta give them that. If that was their main focus, that's what they should sell it under.
Guess it looks like I'm bashing a product I haven't even tried, but that's the impression I get from videos made by them to sell me on their product, can't help it.
No, that wasn't me.
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- KVRist
- 294 posts since 20 Feb, 2004 from Russia
I know, they will release ReVST! It will be basic app without anything, but will host VST and can be integrated with Reason or Record seamlessly!Stupid American Pig wrote:Its good to read that coming from you.blank/diod wrote:No, it was a comment on the irony of Record/Reason sharing a key with VST plugins, it's kinda like shoving a bunch of cats and dogs into a small room and closing the door.koolkeys wrote:And are you saying that you don't want multiple products on a single key?I mean honestly why not support VS fecking T?!?!?! They already use Steinbergs ASIO why not support what 99% of home musicians have 99% of their fx in as the ONLY format.
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- KVRist
- 294 posts since 20 Feb, 2004 from Russia
...and some crappy primitive music starts.kmonkey wrote:I really liked video with Dave Spoon on Props site. I am sure he have ton of pro work (i did not check but i am sure) but this is just too funny. He is talking all over the place about "nasty" sound..... and then he hit play- classic
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- KVRist
- 408 posts since 16 Jan, 2007
Gotta love the MTV-generation attention span in this thread... I've posted the link to their explanation on why they don't support VST plugins twice in the last few pages, yet ten posts later there's always someone wondering how come they don't support VST.Stupid American Pig wrote:I mean honestly why not support VS fecking T?!?!?!
Again:
- Go here
- Scroll down and read "Plug-ins, part 1"
- Take it or leave it
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christianmusicmaker christianmusicmaker https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=12152
- KVRAF
- 1670 posts since 1 Feb, 2004 from UK
I just think for synthtopia to have to apologise for calling it a DAW is a bit over the top. They should have let synthtopia make their own minds up about it. It will be very interesting to see what other mags call it in their reviews, CMM are already clalling it a DAW and have a review coming up in their next issue IIRC.blank/diod wrote:That aspect doesn't concern them much, people have been listing and lamenting Reason's lack of this or that feature for aeons... the products are out there for everyone to compare to other products so it's not like it's possible to hide anything or make up anyone's mind on what to call stuff.christianmusicmaker wrote:Personally I think Props can call it want they want (it's their product) but they seem terribly scared of comparison with similar applications that also allow you to work with D...igital A...udio in a virtual software W...orkstation.
Life goes on of course. It was just a strange thing to read about. I first saw the link on Peter Kirns CDM. He thought the Props went a bit too far in this case as well. Hopefully just a bump on the road to clarifying what /where it's target market really is.
blank...I totally get what you are saying there. That makes perfect sense. They just want the perception of their product to be less to do with Audio features and more to do with working with or making Music with Audio AFAICT. The latter does sound better. I get that but I guess some aspects of Record don't really back that up.The reason they don't like the term DAW is the middle part, "audio" (not that "digital" and "workstation" are sexy either). To them it's all about music, and referring to music as audio is kinda like referring to humans as meat. It's technically correct, but a bit cold and icky. They want to put the emphasis on what it's really about... emotions, not sound waves. Why? I don't know. Maybe they push the soft values to make more women buy it. Maybe they're pretentious. Maybe they're just insane. But it ties into this whole "for musicians, not engineers" thing. Music is a huge part of their creative process and there's a lot of playing going on in the office, at least half the staff are in one band or the other. I sat opposite the product manager for Record for a few months last year and I rarely saw him without a guitar or bass on his lap, jamming away. They really live by this "music not audio" thing, it's not just some marketing ploy.
But yeah every set up has to try and place their product in the market place and I don't doubt what you say about how many of the Props are musicians. Makes sense.
I think Bullshark makes a pretty good point here...
Not necessarily Reason 5 (might have been better though) but something like "extend your Reason Rack or system" now that really clicks and would immediately make more sense than their current marketing push. Anyhoo thats my 2 cents worth on the matterbullshark wrote:The interface is consistent with their other product thought, gotta give them that. If that was their main focus, that's what they should sell it under.
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- KVRist
- 408 posts since 16 Jan, 2007
Well yeah, it was a bit strange, but there was no need for them to be so incredibly apologetic, I mean all Props said was "we'd appreciate it if you didn't refer to Record as a DAW" and Synthopia acted like they had woken up with a horse's head in their bed.christianmusicmaker wrote:I just think for synthtopia to have to apologise for calling it a DAW is a bit over the top. They should have let synthtopia make their own minds up about it.
I never said that their intentions translated with 100% success to the final product, that's for others to decide, I'm just explaining where they're coming from with this whole "not a DAW" thing.blank...I totally get what you are saying there. That makes perfect sense. They just want the perception of their product to be less to do with Audio features and more to do with working with or making Music with Audio AFAICT. The latter does sound better. I get that but I guess some aspects of Record don't really back that up.
Anyway, yeah, it will be interesting to see what the press will say about it. Public reception has been along the usual lines for a Propellerhead product -- polarized and ranging from "what the hell am I supposed to do with this?" to "OMG I'm giving up all my material possessions to live in eternal harmony with Record". Reason got the same kind of best ever/worst ever reception.
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- KVRAF
- 7489 posts since 6 Jul, 2004
blank/diod wrote:Well yeah, it was a bit strange, but there was no need for them to be so incredibly apologetic, I mean all Props said was "we'd appreciate it if you didn't refer to Record as a DAW" and Synthopia acted like they had woken up with a horse's head in their bed.christianmusicmaker wrote:I just think for synthtopia to have to apologise for calling it a DAW is a bit over the top. They should have let synthtopia make their own minds up about it.![]()
I think the synthtopia "appology" was intended to be totally ironic. In effect, I think they completely *owned* Propellerheads here, showing them up to be pretentious and pompous. I dare say that they will continue to show a good deal of ridicule towards the Props in future, too.
The impression I get is that the Props are desperately trying to justify Record as a unique and innovative product, when in fact it's just an odd product.
As for the whole "musicians not engineers" thing they are spinning... who should be most offended by this jibe? - musicians (are we too stupid or lazy to be engineers?), or engineers (don't they have any musical creativity to contribute to projects?)?
They've basically taken the exact opposite approach to Ableton, who have clearly sought to unify the disciplines of music creation (musicians) and production (engineers), making both accessible and complementary in a forward-looking environment.
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- KVRAF
- 7489 posts since 6 Jul, 2004
No, surely not? Music is dots on manuscript paper. Music is playing instruments. Music is the sound of a dawn chorus in a forest as nature wakes up in the morning. Music is the sneezing and burps coming from the audience during a performance of John Cage's 4'33". Music can also be audio files manipulated for creative effect (you know, the stuff those pesky engineers get up to).christianmusicmaker wrote:blank...I totally get what you are saying there. That makes perfect sense.The reason they don't like the term DAW is the middle part, "audio" (not that "digital" and "workstation" are sexy either). To them it's all about music, and referring to music as audio is kinda like referring to humans as meat. It's technically correct, but a bit cold and icky. They want to put the emphasis on what it's really about... emotions, not sound waves. Why? I don't know. Maybe they push the soft values to make more women buy it. Maybe they're pretentious. Maybe they're just insane. But it ties into this whole "for musicians, not engineers" thing. Music is a huge part of their creative process and there's a lot of playing going on in the office, at least half the staff are in one band or the other. I sat opposite the product manager for Record for a few months last year and I rarely saw him without a guitar or bass on his lap, jamming away. They really live by this "music not audio" thing, it's not just some marketing ploy.
Music is a whole, wonderful, amazing range of things, most of which Propellerhead Record doesn't do.
Audio on the other hand is something that Record DOES do. It does the recording part in a fairly standard way. It can be used to do the mixing really well, especially if you are one of those pesky engineers who likes huge mixing consoles but can't afford one. And it does editing... well, no it doesn't actually.
Saying that Record is about "music" not "audio" is nothing more than a deliberate distraction, a sleight of hand to explain away the glaring lack of audio recording features that version 1 has. I would say it's almost an insult to the inteligence to be honest.
Mate, you know that I have been a big advocate for the Props here over the years, and very enthusiastic about Reason. I've used it loads and given professional training courses in it. But the way the Props have handled this new product, and the plain bullsh*t they are coming up with now is just... perplexing.
Initially I liked that they made Record a different product, and there seemed to be a rationale for that. Then I tried using it, and realised that the only real strength it has is that it integrates audio into Reason. So I think if it had been Reason 5 that would have been far better, plus it would have created different and perhaps more realistic expectations.Not necessarily Reason 5 (might have been better though)