As a more serious sidenote,hifiboom wrote:we are professionals
Bartender, ggive me two of whatever you're serving to that table of professionals over there!
As a more serious sidenote,hifiboom wrote:we are professionals
nuffink wrote:Yes. To both. If you understood the first you wouldn't ask the second.Cordelia wrote:nufflink,
Are you implying that I don't understand what -150dB means, or are you saying that any difference of -150dB is ridiculous to discuss anyway?

sure - but even if:nuisance sonore wrote: What I'm getting at is this, is it not possible that, even tought in theory all the hosts should sound the same, that some bugs or different methods in implementation would make a difference? And I'm talking audible difference here.
I don't know, I haven't seen any in this thread so far, pro or con, and it's a year old...jens wrote:
So where are the valid results of properly executed tests?
bingonuisance sonore wrote:I don't know, I haven't seen any in this thread so far, pro or con, and it's a year old...jens wrote:
So where are the valid results of properly executed tests?
why should I? I'm usually entirely satisfied with the output of my 40€ sequencer (and if not I make a bug-report) - in other words: no, we agree...Kingston wrote: You can do the tests yourself
I was not the one that started with insults....arke wrote:you are too funnay
Erm ... well sorry to burst your bubble, but Guess what VSTi outputs? wav data! Guess what VST-fx input and output? wav data! The same stuff thats in a wav file. Exactly the same.hifiboom wrote: man, I don`t mix wav files in a host!
I mix VSTi and VST-fx....
Professional? O RLY? I don't believe that.hifiboom wrote: Maybe you are right that there are no differences mixing wav files.....
But we are professionals and I do not buy Cubase to just mix loops!! ( then I could use any other 40$ software )
With VSTi synths etc. there are drastical sound differnces... and nearly every mix with VSTi in Cubase sounds little ill (phasing effects, digital harsh sound)
Ohters do confirm this, too.
Here's a good test - Use a third host, not cubase or samplitude, and export a wav file of a VSTi playing. Then, import that wav into both Cubase and Samplitude, with the same reverb on the same preset, and export them to another wav file. Then, take an audio editor, and normalize them to the same value. I will guarantee you that they will sound the same (and I hate Cubase just as much as the next person).
What hardware should sound like? What HARDWARE should sound like? If you're looking for hardware sounds then go back to using hardware step sequencers, hardware synths, and hardware 8-track tape recorders. In the meanwhile, we'll be making sounds with our software that is just as warm as hardware, sounds much more clear, and is easier to set up too.hifiboom wrote: And as we can discuss this in a normal way, there are other idiots (like arke) that cannot talk on a normal level, because they are just kids that never know what hardware should sound like...
Oh yeah, and before you start insulting, make sure you understand the language well enogh to make a meaningful insult. You're welcome to insult me in german, if you wish, I understand it just fine. Otherwise, you're just making yourself seem excessively stupid. Oh wait, you are.hifiboom wrote: hey you little sun of a whore. Its your sig. change to every shit you have in your small head...
Put it like this you clown, would you jump in a boiling melt of lava, when you full well know you would die?hifiboom wrote:on the other hand you did not do any test on your own at all.
look mate, let me tell you a story:hifiboom wrote: On the one hand, you criticize my sound comparison, on the other hand you did not do any test on your own at all.


Fine:jens wrote: and if you still say the rat on the pic hasn't got any wings then go on and prove it!'

nuisance sonore wrote:Fine:jens wrote: and if you still say the rat on the pic hasn't got any wings then go on and prove it!'
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