Well till my Windows 10 machine died, it was Reason. Reason is an all in one DAW. Program, record, mix and master with super tactile graphics and an intuitive layout. Been two years without. I miss it.
I’ve been meaning to ask, what complaints do you have with open source DAWs? I know a lot of VST plugins just refuse to work in other programs, but what specifically do you miss the most?
The Reason workflow was special. It was just like working with hardware. When my windows machine croaked and I moved full time to my Linux laptop, I installed a few things, but Linux was not talking to my ancient audio input interface. Little surprise there, I had been running it with a windows 7 legacy driver. I have not bought a new one yet. That’s it. Had enough going on to not get back to messing with it. I don’t actually have an opinion on any of what I have installed.
Well till my Windows 10 machine died, it was Reason. Reason is an all in one DAW. Program, record, mix and master with super tactile graphics and an intuitive layout. Been two years without. I miss it.
I’ve been meaning to ask, what complaints do you have with open source DAWs? I know a lot of VST plugins just refuse to work in other programs, but what specifically do you miss the most?
The Reason workflow was special. It was just like working with hardware. When my windows machine croaked and I moved full time to my Linux laptop, I installed a few things, but Linux was not talking to my ancient audio input interface. Little surprise there, I had been running it with a windows 7 legacy driver. I have not bought a new one yet. That’s it. Had enough going on to not get back to messing with it. I don’t actually have an opinion on any of what I have installed.
I was looking up stuff about Linux DAWs today, and I found this. I don’t know if you already know about it or not, but maybe it’ll be helpful to you.
Nope, hadn’t seen that yet. I will absolutely give it a solid look when I get back to my laptop. Thanks!