![]() ![]() At that point of stability, these 3 DAW's shine, so I'd say you then better look to workflow functionality, access to a greater selection of plugins such as VST's, and greater plugin integration to sort what's best. ![]() That said, I didn't feel the need for a public "screw you Sonar" tour of the forums before switching to S1.įor stability, I've found the top 3 DAW's to be Reason, then Reaper, followed by Studio One. But if they sorted out a few key things (namely stability, and made smaller/scalable UI elements, particularly the console) I could one day envision myself returning. I refrain from doing it, because you never know when a future version might add THAT special feature, and I have to come back with my tail between my legs.Įxactly. There's a lot about Logic I could complain about, but at the end of the day, who cares? The Logic community certainly doesn't. I stopped using Logic a few months ago (S1 and Reaper meet all my needs) but I didn't go to the Logic forums to announce it. I just fail to understand the need to take "a parting shot" on the way out. Modern daw users are rather transient (no audio pun intended) in general.Īgreed and I get it. ![]() Same thing happened when Studio One 3 released. Reaper 5, Cubase 8, Logic X, Bitwig, whatever. On every major daw release somebody says that. Graytermedia wrote Lawrence wroteI wouldn't read too much into it. I'd also warn the OP that in my experience, the longer you use a particular DAW, the longer the list of gripes (feature requests) about it grow as you ask yourself questions like "why isn't this simple feature from X DAW implemented in my current DAW, I didn't even notice that at first." It's all about finding a DAW that does most of what you want well, and maybe keeping another DAW or two (and/or a notation editor) around in case you need a particular feature. If we're going to have threads like this at all, I just wish posters would focus more on "how to improve Studio One" versus the "I found a better DAW haha" tone that these posts all too often have. That said, Studio One lets me work more intuitively and efficiently. For instance, yeah, Reaper's startup time and CPU efficiency are HUGE advantages over S1. These posts are always kind of obnoxious in that they're completely unnecessary (if you like Reaper better, fine), but there is some useful information to be gleaned from comparing strengths and weaknesses of one DAW to another. ![]()
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