Rip and Burn can be used for creating MP3's from your CD's and also converting other music formats to MP3 (like wav to mp3) or back and forth. It allows you to save your CD's to all kinds of music formats like MP3, WMA, OGG, APE, WAV, VQF and then play them back on almost any device. On some days, though, I can't help thinking what a terrible mess this whole software audio thing is.Power Audio CD Burner is the perfect software for ripping, converting or burning your favorite music. Logic and WaveBurner are far from perfect, but I use them on a daily base and get some very nice results out of them. Yes, I couldn't agree more! The entirety of the Logic Pro bundle could be seen as a reaction to the rest of the market. Competition always is a good motor for development. I also hope Waveburner would be available without Logic. People might decide to buy it.īut back to the subject. I think it's generally a good idea to get demo software right. There are some other copy protection schemes that are very effective without causing remotely as much trouble (a clean implementation of Challenge-Response, for instance, does not need to install kernel extensions, nor does it require hardware dongles). iLok has a reputation for causing crashes and panics, a quick forum search should shed some light on that. The iLok protection code was the reason why the demo crashed left, right and center when I - and others - tried it out. Since both apps are authorized via iLok, what is so diiferent with the copy protection scheme to other software? Roland Storch wrote on Mon, 02 April 2007 20:31 "Apple: Going out of business since 1984" I really don't understand how people can put up with all that and at the same time expect celestial perfection from Apple, but again that's just my personal view.Īpple could have made it a year ago, alone. And I don't like their copy protection scheme which basically de-stabilises the entire system. And I don't find the interface particularly appealing. In my very personal opinion, Sonic didn't exactly win me over by publishing a demo version full of crashing bugs, even if they apparently fixed some of them in the meantime. But also a little more expensive if you want to use the DeClicking, Renovation and other products. But why are you concluding that being interested in one market excludes being interested in another?Īnd now there is Sonic Studio with soundBlade, with declicking, DDP, great SRC from iZotope, exoprt and load in of Jam files, NoNoise, renovator and more mastering plug ins. They had a big chance to be market leader for mastering apps on OSX, but they didn?t care. I fear that still would be waste of energy. Roland Storch wrote on Sat, 31 March 2007 00:51 I just sent this post to Apple via your link. It's such a great, easy to use application, that deserves more development and TLC. occasionally after "bounce project" the image disappears when it's time to burn. ability to bounce to standard JAM imagesġ0. improve plug-in support, although I never use 'em, I know lots of users do.ĩ. AND the option to bypass the AU configuration procedure for those of us that don't use plugs.Ĩ. fix the AU Manager, which is really really slow & buggy, esp on the initial configuration, and after trashing prefs. split it from Logic Pro to broaden the user base.ħ. more specifics in the users guide about what happens when.ĥ. incorrect headers when bouncing regions.ģ. erratic behavior when editing the purple pre-gap area, esp when trimming the front of a region.Ģ. If we could find out who the main programmer and decision makers are for WB it would help.ġ. Last time WB crashed, when the screen popped up for describing the crash symptoms, I wrote a paragraph as to why Apple should update WB, how it's been over a year since one, and there are lots of us pros using it for making masters.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |