Yahoo Groups archive

The Logic Off Topic list

Index last updated: 2026-04-28 23:27 UTC

Thread

re: [OT] Premiere for FCP

re: [OT] Premiere for FCP

2003-07-17 by Eric Baird

--- In http://groups.yahoo.com/group/logic-users/message/142998 , 
methinked@e... wrote:
> 
> For anyone who uses Adobe Premiere in their workflow on a 
> Mac, Apple is now offering a free crossgrade from Premiere 
> to Final Cut Express, or $300 off Final Cut Pro in light 
> of Adobe's recent decision to cease Premiere development 
> on Mac. Both offers require you to send in your 
> Premiere disc.

Its a shame ... I really liked the idea of cross-platform software, I 
thought it kept everything competitive. But I guess we are heading 
for a situation where if you want any media software for the Mac, 
you'll have to get it from Apple. 
Since the company now have their own media apps, and are agressively 
promoting them (and have the ability to "shift the goalposts" at 
short notice to wrong-foot the oposition), then there's really not 
much point in anyone else trying to make those sorts of products for 
the Mac any more.

Re: [L-OT] re: [OT] Premiere for FCP

2003-07-17 by mercutio

On Thursday, July 17, 2003, at 07:45 AM, Eric Baird wrote:

> Its a shame ... I really liked the idea of cross-platform software, I
> thought it kept everything competitive. But I guess we are heading
> for a situation where if you want any media software for the Mac,
> you'll have to get it from Apple.
>
No argument - but you have to admit the goal posts have already been 
shifted by Avid, Adobe and countless other companies who were once "Mac 
first" companies but now are "Windows first".

I think this is a defensive move on Apple's part, and quite 
understandable.

Re: [L-OT] re: [OT] Premiere for FCP

2003-07-17 by itsplayed

--- mercutio <mercutio@...> wrote:
> 
> . But I
> guess we are heading
> > for a situation where if you want any media
> software for the Mac,
> > you'll have to get it from Apple.
> >
> No argument - but you have to admit the goal posts
> have already been 
> shifted by Avid, Adobe and countless other companies
> who were once "Mac 
> first" companies but now are "Windows first".
> 
> I think this is a defensive move on Apple's part,
> and quite 
> understandable.
> 
>  The Goal post's were set by Apple back when they
took the cloning of there PC away from 3rd party
companies. If cloning of there product was still going
on there market share in the PC realm would be greatly
increased. And just maybe there would be more 3rd
party "Mac Only" software companies out there.You
can't blame companies like Avid and Adobe to simply go
where the bulk of business resides. I'm afraid that in
the future if you want the software that'll run on
your Mac, you'll need to turn to Apple more and more.

-Steve


__________________________________
Do you Yahoo!?
SBC Yahoo! DSL - Now only $29.95 per month!
http://sbc.yahoo.com

Re: [L-OT] re: [OT] Premiere for FCP

2003-07-17 by mercutio

On Thursday, July 17, 2003, at 09:57 AM, itsplayed wrote:

> I'm afraid that in
> the future if you want the software that'll run on
> your Mac, you'll need to turn to Apple more and more.
>
You may be right... Apple may even just die. But since I already prefer 
Logic, FCP et al to their respective competitors, its not a problem at 
least for the present.

Re: [L-OT] re: [OT] Premiere for FCP

2003-07-17 by Oblivian | Bacteria AS

>> I'm afraid that in
>> the future if you want the software that'll run on
>> your Mac, you'll need to turn to Apple more and more.

On Thursday, July 17, 2003 4:00 PM, <mercutio> wrote:
> You may be right... Apple may even just die. But since I already
> prefer
> Logic, FCP et al to their respective competitors, its not a problem at
> least for the present.

Anyway you put it, it is never posititive that an OS vendor also makes
software. That goes for M$ too of course. Many companies refrain from
competetive developing on that particular platform of that spesific software
when they have to "beat" the actual OS developer. Quite understandable. And
this is never for the benefit of the end-user. That Apple drops Premiere for
Apple is and should be very disturbing for Mac people. M$ dropped IE for Mac
the very same day (almost) that Safari was released. Some of you might say
that Safari is better or that Final Cut is better than Premiere, but that is
obviously beyond the point. Somebody just lost their favourite software and
all of you lost the option to choose.

Re: [L-OT] re: [OT] Premiere for FCP

2003-07-18 by Eric Baird

--- In logic-ot@yahoogroups.com, mercutio <mercutio@c...> wrote:
> 
> On Thursday, July 17, 2003, at 09:57 AM, itsplayed wrote:
> 
> > I'm afraid that in
> > the future if you want the software that'll run on
> > your Mac, you'll need to turn to Apple more and more.
> >
> You may be right... Apple may even just die. 

I think Apple might have a great future ahead of them as an online 
MP3 provider, for all platforms. The record companies don't seem to 
have a clue, Apple have the startup funds and the focus, and the iPod 
as a perfect entry point, and if they do it properly ... it could 
give them a new revenue stream that wouldn't need them to spend 
anything on inventory or anything on R&D (other than the computer 
systems needed to run the indexes, deliver the files and take the 
money). They could turn into the "downloadable music" equivalent of 
Amazon (but needing no stock or warehouses!). 

Hell, if they become #1 in online music, why bother making computers 
any more? :-)


> But since I already prefer Logic, FCP et al to their respective 
> competitors, its not a problem at least for the present.

Yep, but remember that Apple weren't capable of writing logic and FCP 
themselves ... those apps were written independently, outside Apple's 
corporate umbrella, and we still need to see how they develop once 
the new corporate priorities are taken into account.
Apple may well consider that logic6x is already "good enough", and 
that their bought-in emagic brains might only be allowed to continue 
to work on it if they spend time working on more "popular" Apple 
projects rather than on a logic7. 

Maybe Apple might want a killer karaoke programme, or an 
autoarranger, or a "put together your own hit single from these 
component parts" program , or a "learn to play guitar along with 
whatever's in this week's top ten" system. If they end up running a 
major MP3 business, they might want to explore all sorts of wild and 
wacky MP3-related software ideas. They'll probably be wanting to look 
at anything they can sell to their new MP3 userbase.

Maybe a new type of easy-to-use entry-level sequencer, with big 
animated icons, new softinstruments and happy-happy-appley front-ends 
on everything?

Re: [L-OT] re: [OT] Premiere for FCP

2003-07-18 by Eric Baird

--- In logic-ot@yahoogroups.com, "Oblivian | Bacteria AS" wrote:
> ...
> Anyway you put it, it is never posititive that an OS vendor 
> also makes software. That goes for M$ too of course. 

Oh yes, MS are the stock example!
MSWord development seemed to be ****ed up for years as it drifted 
around in the wash of Microsoft's shifting corporate visions. 
And I thought Visual Basic had had the chance to completely turn the 
software development market upside down, if its development team had 
been allowed to go ahead and turn it into the complete killer cross-
platform development tool it could have been ... but they only seemed 
to support MS operating systems (no Mac version), and didn't 
initially include a compiler (conflict with VC++), and then got 
bogged down as VB got used as a pawn in MS strategy after strategy. 


> Many companies refrain from competetive developing on that 
> particular platform of that spesific software
> when they have to "beat" the actual OS developer. Quite 
> understandable. 

Yep, if you have the code for an incredible new wordpocessor, it's 
probably not worth releasing it for Windows, because most Windows 
people will just continue to buy Microsoft's own MSWord by default.
Partly because MSWord is considered the "standard" Windows WP 
program, partly because it has the MS stamp on it, and partly because 
the buyer knows that if they buy a competing Windows wordprocessor, 
there are going to be question marks over the future of that software 
under Windows (because they are not going to have an easy time 
competing with MS).
So the "safe" option is buying MSWord, despite any deficiencies in 
the product, and because MS don't have to make the app compete too 
hard to keep market share, its development progress has been 
appallingly slow. 
MS probably don't give a damn, it still sells.

Re: [L-OT] re: [OT] Premiere for FCP

2003-07-18 by Oblivian | Bacteria AS

> --- In logic-ot@yahoogroups.com, "Oblivian | Bacteria AS" wrote:
>> ...
>> Anyway you put it, it is never posititive that an OS vendor
>> also makes software. That goes for M$ too of course.

On Friday, July 18, 2003 3:47 AM, <Eric Baird> wrote:
> Oh yes, MS are the stock example!
> MSWord development seemed to be ****ed up for years as it drifted
> around in the wash of Microsoft's shifting corporate visions.
> And I thought Visual Basic had had the chance to completely turn the
> software development market upside down, if its development team had
> been allowed to go ahead and turn it into the complete killer cross-
> platform development tool it could have been ... but they only seemed
> to support MS operating systems (no Mac version), and didn't
> initially include a compiler (conflict with VC++), and then got
> bogged down as VB got used as a pawn in MS strategy after strategy.

Sorry, I don't agree with you. Even though an OS vendor develops other
software doesn't mean that the software they develop is inferior to the
competition. M$ is a prime example of that. I can think of no other software
that substitutes MS Office. Yes, there are alternatives, but they aren't
"better". Before MS Word it was Word Perfect for DOS... IE vs Netscape? We
all know Netscape sucked. It isn't even around anymore since AOL simply
dropped further development. Same with Premiere vs Final Cut. Final Cut is
commonly regarded the better choice. The problem is that it is developed by
Apple, and Apple is an OS vendor. I think Adobe had challenged any other
developer, but since it's Apple they just don't bother. What puzzles me and
what should disturb you is that if there's any company that has made Apple
what it is today, it's Adobe. And when Adobe starts looking elsewhere it is
not a good sign I'm afraid. And it's Apple's own fault. What if Steinberg
feels the same way after the aquisition of Emagic. Maybe in a year or two
we're stuck with Logic on Mac. Terrible... Opera is "thinking loud" about
discontinuing development for Mac, M$ has stopped further development for IE
on Mac. Windows Media Player 9.0 wont ever be released for Mac, and that is
a BIG problem since WMA and WMV is regarded the second largest format after
MP3 and MPEG, followed by Real and QT. They wont even release the codec.
What Apple doesn't seem to understand is that Mac is a niche computer and
Apple isn't M$. M$ is one of the largest and most influential companies in
the world. They can pull of things like that and get away with it. Apple
can't, they're to small. They just don't seem to get it, I'm afraid...

My initial post stands. Apple shouldn't develop Final Cut, Final Cut Pro,
Safari, Logic or any other "auxillery" software. Neither should M$, but
since they are so much bigger than little Apple, they are more likely to get
away with it.

Anyway, I find it strange that some of you tend to compare Apple and M$. It
is two completely different companies and different rules apply to them.
Apple wont ever be prosecuted under anti-Trust laws/violations because they
wont ever be in a position to do so. M$ is because they have a
world-monopoly. That doesn't mean that M$ is worse than Apple businesswise
since M$ has been accused and Apple not. And it certainly doesn't mean that
they are better either. Had Apple been as big as M$, I am certain they have
had exactly the same "problems".

Re: [L-OT] re: [OT] Premiere for FCP

2003-07-18 by Studio ByPass

Yes u're on right as Logic drop in MAc.That's why i stay in PC wih my 5.51 V in PC
But i don't want to change plateform or software every years.
I have no money and time to do this.
Maybe Linux will be my big change

Nicolas
Show quoted textHide quoted text
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Oblivian | Bacteria AS 
  To: logic-ot@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Thursday, July 17, 2003 10:24 PM
  Subject: Re: [L-OT] re: [OT] Premiere for FCP


  >> I'm afraid that in
  >> the future if you want the software that'll run on
  >> your Mac, you'll need to turn to Apple more and more.

  On Thursday, July 17, 2003 4:00 PM, <mercutio> wrote:
  > You may be right... Apple may even just die. But since I already
  > prefer
  > Logic, FCP et al to their respective competitors, its not a problem at
  > least for the present.

  Anyway you put it, it is never posititive that an OS vendor also makes
  software. That goes for M$ too of course. Many companies refrain from
  competetive developing on that particular platform of that spesific software
  when they have to "beat" the actual OS developer. Quite understandable. And
  this is never for the benefit of the end-user. That Apple drops Premiere for
  Apple is and should be very disturbing for Mac people. M$ dropped IE for Mac
  the very same day (almost) that Safari was released. Some of you might say
  that Safari is better or that Final Cut is better than Premiere, but that is
  obviously beyond the point. Somebody just lost their favourite software and
  all of you lost the option to choose.



        Yahoo! Groups Sponsor 
              ADVERTISEMENT
             
       
       

  Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service. 


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Re: [L-OT] re: [OT] Premiere for FCP

2003-07-18 by Eric Baird

--- In logic-ot@yahoogroups.com, "Oblivian | Bacteria AS" wrote:
> 
> Sorry, I don't agree with you. Even though an OS vendor 
> develops other software doesn't mean that the software 
> they develop is inferior to the competition. 

Well, it /often/ does, because they can get away with more.
Of course, sometimes the in-house programs are so bad that they never 
make it to market at all. I don't know if you ever saw the early 
betas of MSNetwork (which Gates had told the developers was going to 
eliminate the internet). It was, quite literally, the worst piece of 
software I've ever, ever seen, but the in-house hype that it 
was "great" meant that it was demoed to developers as the Next Big 
Thing. A small focused development team would never have done that.  

And there was Apple's promised raft of killer multimedia apps, when 
they releanched their multimedia division years ago (which at the 
time was what stopped me from developing for the Mac). Ever see any 
of those apps? :-) Or there was the previous press launch, years 
before that, where they flew a guy to London to eagerly show a bunch 
of unimpressed music shop people a buggy demo of a half-working 
arpeggiator utility. At the time I had a 96-MIDI-channel Notator 
system at home, so their incredible demo didn't exactly knock me out.

How good were Apple's own in-house attempts at writing video editing 
or music composition apps? Well, if they'd been any good, would they 
have had to buy in logic and FC from outside?


> M$ is a prime 
> example of that. I can think of no other software
> that substitutes MS Office. 

MS pretty much destroyed the opposition with their tactics. They 
leveraged Office, the OS, development tools and the apps to get 
competitive advantage for whichever component was considered to be 
least competitive at the time, and deliberately engineered 
incompatibilities between their OS subsystems and competing office 
apps. As a developer, I had to buy Word in order to construct 
helpfiles. Word had some nice features, but had (/has?) some 
outrageous bugs and mistakes which didn't get fixed for years. 
Some parts of Windows/Office were very impressive, but those tended 
to be parts that MS had bought in, rather than developing them 
themselves. I was really impressed by the MS Equation Editor, but 
that was apparently designed by an independent one-man software 
company. 


I do think that Internet Explorer is very good (they bought in the 
core code instead of developing it themselves, but I like part of 
what they've since done with it).  


> Yes, there are alternatives, but they aren't
> "better". Before MS Word it was Word Perfect for DOS ... 

Remember the Atari-based wordprocessors? Calamus on the Atari had 
outline vector fonts, Word didn't catch up with that until ... 
Word97? 
And if you tried writing a book or a technical documentation on Word, 
its internal structure couldn't cope. MS claimed to have produced 
their own manuals using Word, but I was at a conference where someone 
asked how to get Word to produce a certain layout effect used in the 
manuals, and they had to awkwardly admit that, yes, they'd actually 
used Something Else (probably Adobe). 

> IE vs Netscape? We all know Netscape sucked. 

Yep, Netscape sucked.

> It isn't even around anymore since AOL simply dropped further 
> development. 

Yeah, well, AOL aren't exactly a good example of a little independent 
software team with no corporate issues, are they? 
(/perhaps/ Netscape could have bee saved if development had been 
given to a hungry motivated team with clear ideas about what they 
wanted to achieve with it, dunno ... or perhaps MS's obvious plan to 
give away IE for the major platforms simply made it not worth while 
putting in the resources needed to bring Netscape up to scratch) 

I thought that Compuserve used to be rather good, but then they 
committed to having MS redesign their system, that idea broke down, 
and then they got made part of AOL Time Warner. 
Now the corporate strategy regarding Compuserve seems to try to shut 
it down, after getting existng members to switch to AOL. It's a 
captive userbase, that's all.
 
But maybe (overall) IE counts a a success story. 
"Outside talent+ corporate muscle" sometimes does prduce nice things 
(the Pixar hookup with The Evil Disney Corp seemed to work very 
well), but only when the corporation doesn't start fiddling around 
and interfering with the product to make it fit their corporate plans 
better.

Who here thinks that logic is now a better suite for losing Windows 
support? And for not supporting OSX VST? And for losing the option of 
supporting UNIX?
Are emagic a more open and up-front and friendly company since being 
taken over by Apple? How far do you trust them to be able to deliver 
on a development roadmap now? Hell, they probably aren't even allowed 
to tell us what the roadmap is (assuming that it exists).


> Same with Premiere vs Final Cut. 

Well, I understood that FC is largely composed of bits that Apple 
acquired by taking over and cannibalising other companies.
I'm not saying that that's always a bad thing, but in order for that 
strategy to work, you have to have those little companies out there 
in the first place, thinking that they can actually make some money 
in the market with their nice nice apps and components. 

Once Apple have the market stitched up, where does the next 
generation of innovation come from?


> Final Cut is commonly regarded the better choice. The problem 
> is that it is developed by Apple, and Apple is an OS vendor. 


> What puzzles me and what should disturb you is that if there's 
> any company that has made Apple what it is today, it's Adobe. 

Yep, Adobe are persistent innovators (even if their product marketing 
is sometimes a little odd). Didn't Adobe also develop the TrueType 
font-handling subsystem system for Microsoft, for Windows? 

> And when Adobe starts looking elsewhere it is
> not a good sign I'm afraid. And it's Apple's own fault. 
> What if Steinberg feels the same way after the aquisition 
> of Emagic. Maybe in a year or two we're stuck with Logic 
> on Mac. 

Well, Steinberg were kinda bludgeoned into making an early public 
decision on whether to continue with Apple support or not (even 
though Apple were now deliberately not supporting Steinberg's OSX VST 
format for tactical reasons), and under pressure, they said they'd 
continue with OSX. 
But that doesn't mean that they are not now going to make Windows 
their priority. Especially now that they've been bought out by 
Pinnacle.

> Terrible... Opera is "thinking loud" about
> discontinuing development for Mac, M$ has stopped further 
> development for IE on Mac. Windows Media Player 9.0 wont 
> ever be released for Mac, and that is
> a BIG problem since WMA and WMV is regarded the second 
> largest format after MP3 and MPEG, followed by Real and QT. 
> They wont even release the codec.

Well, Apple do seem to be throwing down the gauntlet in a number of 
media sectors and effectively saying that they can go it alone. 

I don't know exactly what happened between Apple and Sony, but Sony's 
NetMD software doesn't work with the Mac, so you can probably add 
ATRAC to your list of unsupported formats. 
Of course, perhaps Apple think that the iPod cupled with their MP3 
business will obliterate everything else, and who knows, maybe they 
migth even be right. But I've seen lots of kids on the tube playing 
with their minidisc players, and haven't yet seen an iPod outside a 
retail shop. Maybe iPod uptake is much higher in the US, dunno.


> What Apple doesn't seem to understand is that Mac is a niche 
> computer and Apple isn't M$. M$ is one of the largest and most 
> influential companies in the world. They can pull of things 
> like that and get away with it. Apple can't, they're to small. 
> They just don't seem to get it, I'm afraid...

Yep, MS made the good business decision early not to get into 
building the computers themselves. They let IBM make a loss on their 
original PC range breaking in the market, and they let Taiwanese 
manufacturers happily cut each others throats for profit margins, 
while they just sell these little CD packs. 
Apple got too greedy and decided that they wanted the whole pie for 
themselves, and then suffered for years with manufacturing 
difficulties and inventory issues. MS just let other people worry 
about building expensive obsolescent hardware and just creamed off a 
profit on each machine based on what those manufavcturers had 
installed on their harddrives.     

iPod is a very different product for Apple, the critical software and 
hardware technologies behind it are third-party, and Apple just 
supply the design flair and marketing. And its supposed ot be rather 
successful. Instead of getting themselves into a tizzy over R&D and 
manufacturing for the next generation of hard drives for the next-
generation iPod, they can just sit back and let the PC HD 
manufacturers fight amongst themselves to bring down 2.5" HD prices 
and increased capacity ... and when the time is right, Apple just 
have to buy some of the new 2.5" HD models, plug em in, and they've 
got a brand new improved iPod. 

Some people at Apple must be thinking .. why the hell don't we go 
further along this path with the computer processors too?
Just assemble a damned good PC from the cream of the readily-
available computer hardware, have a version of OSX that only runs 
with an Apple-authorised chip, and if we ever decide to get out of 
the desktop market, we still have the res tof the business intact.

I mean, the way things are currently going, it looks like in a few 
years, the only critical apps that would need to be rewritten to run 
on a G6 will basically be Apple's own apps anyway ...


> My initial post stands. Apple shouldn't develop Final Cut, 
> Final Cut Pro, Safari, Logic or any other "auxillery" software. 


> Neither should M$, but
> since they are so much bigger than little Apple, they are more 
likely to get
> away with it.
> 
> Anyway, I find it strange that some of you tend to compare 
> Apple and M$. It is two completely different companies and 
> different rules apply to them.
> Apple wont ever be prosecuted under anti-Trust laws/violations 
> because they wont ever be in a position to do so. M$ is because 
> they have a world-monopoly. That doesn't mean that M$ is worse 
> than Apple businesswise since M$ has been accused and Apple not. 

> And it certainly doesn't mean that they are better either. Had  
> Apple been as big as M$, I am certain they have
> had exactly the same "problems".

I think that one of the main reasons that some people liked Apple was 
that they weren't Microsoft. Now that they seem to be aspiring 
to /be/ Microsoft, some of us are wondering whether we'd actually 
miss them if they went under. Maybe a more friendly company would 
take their place.
It'd be a shame to lose further logic development, but since there 
are no public commitments form apple/emagic that there's going to be 
significant further logic development anyway ...

Re: [L-OT] re: [OT] Premiere for FCP

2003-07-18 by mercutio

On Friday, July 18, 2003, at 08:01 AM, Eric Baird wrote:

> Who here thinks that logic is now a better suite for losing Windows
> support? And for not supporting OSX VST? And for losing the option of
> supporting UNIX?

first one - I think it has to be better. Many things that are kludgy 
about Logic probably had to do with keeping a generalized design that 
could quickly compile to both platforms. Look at MOTU - which remained 
Mac only and how they came from being dead in the water to having much 
better Quicktime integration. I think because they didn't have to worry 
about Windows at all. Now Logic can move with the same efficiency.

second one - not supporting VST is as much a political decision as 
anything. They had to make AU as attractive as possible. They had 
trouble with Steinberg in the past - and I think it reasonable to 
believe that Steinberg had cooperated less than totally open standard. 
Having an important facility under the control of a third party was not 
healthy for either Apple or Emagic.  That said, a good number of plugs 
are carbon now and can be used with the wrapper, and others are coming 
along with their AU versions as well. So I think in the end the point 
is moot. One thing that hasn't changed is that a lot of plug developers 
will make Windows VST versions only... but it was always that way.

third - don't even understand this thing about UNIX... what are you 
referring to?

Re: [L-OT] re: [OT] Premiere for FCP

2003-07-18 by itsplayed

> Maybe a new type of easy-to-use entry-level
> sequencer, with big 
> animated icons, new softinstruments and
> happy-happy-appley front-ends 
> on everything? 
> 
>   Eric, I agree with all that you say....by the way
can I have your permission to use the title
"happy-happy-appley front ends" on my current
instrumental?
-Steve
> 
> 


__________________________________
Do you Yahoo!?
SBC Yahoo! DSL - Now only $29.95 per month!
http://sbc.yahoo.com

Re: [L-OT] re: [OT] Premiere for FCP

2003-07-19 by Eric Baird

--- In logic-ot@yahoogroups.com, mercutio wrote:
> On Friday, July 18, 2003, at 08:01 AM, Eric Baird wrote:
> 
> > Who here thinks that logic is now a better suite for 
> > losing Windows support? And for not supporting OSX VST? 
> > And for losing the option of supporting UNIX?
> 
> first one - I think it has to be better. Many things that 
> are kludgy about Logic probably had to do with keeping a 
> generalized design that could quickly compile to both 
> platforms. 

In theory, I agree ... I don't know what logic was actually written 
with but it /seemed/ to have the sort of design things that you'd end 
up with if you used MS VC++ (colourscheme, badly integrated menus and 
help system). MS VC++ was cross-platform but had some really horrid 
design weaknesses.

Thing is ... after we've paid the price, in terms of losing the cross-
platform stuff, are emagic actually then going to go ahead and 
redesign this great user-interface that we are waiting for, or are 
they going to decide that the payoff isn't worth it at this late 
stage, and keep the program pretty much as it already is?

I mean, with their proprietary softsynth format, one of the 
advantages was that it allowed all sorts of really advanced stuff 
that would only have been possible with emagic having control over 
the interface ... since logic seeemd to be designed to be kinda 
extensible, we might have had the ability to edit additional noteon 
parameters, which could have been assiged to parameters in their 
softsynths, or used as part of a modulation matrix (so that you could 
set a filter setting or playing style for an individual note of a 
chord) ... but it never happened. 
In fact, we never even got support for basic stuff like program 
changes or mono mode!

So the new potential is nice, as long as its really going to be 
realised. But I suspect that some of logic's kludges are less to do 
with cross-platform support than with other things.
Logic 5.5.1's control surface MIDI subsystem stuff really doesn't 
seem to be stable under WinXP, but under OSX, with a rewritten MIDI-
optimised operating system partly redesigned by emagic, and a new 
architecture, and the new focus on a single operating system ... it 
still doesn't seem to be stable! :-)

Of coursed, perhaps emagic are still struggling with cross-platform 
code in order to be able to support both OSX and OS9, and perhaps we 
won't see the real advantages until they go OSX-only. Which they 
don't seem to have any public timetable for. Hmm.

  

> second one - not supporting VST is as much a political decision as 
> anything. 

Quite

[re: UNIX?]
Sorry, my bad wording, I probably should have have said 
the "potential" of UNIX support rather than the "option".
AFAIK, emagic never said that they would be supporting UNIX, but it 
seemed to be a distinct possibility at one point. All the musicy 
people I know are sick of paying money to microsoft and annoyed at 
having to buy complete new computers from Apple to get an alternative 
OS, so the subject of UNIX keeps popping up in conversation ... they 
just just want a simple cheap, cut-down operating system that can run 
their precious DAW software on a dedicated logic-box. They don't want 
to spend a lot of money on the OS, and they don't want to waste 
processing power or harddrive space on maintaining animated icons or 
redrawing pretty curved-edge window borders, or taiwanese language 
support, or 3D graphics or gamer support ... they aren't computer 
enthusiasts, they just want the OS to boot up their computer, launch 
logic, and then keep the hell out of the way. 
If they want to do email and internet stuff, they'll do all that on a 
separate general purpose machine and keep their DAW box lean and mean 
tuned up and dedicated to running their DAW.

I liked the idea of a logic-optimised version of UNIX with all the 
unneccessary stuff stripped out or pre-disabled, bundled 
with "logix", and I think a lot of musicians would have been very 
happy to have a music PC that simply boots up into a pre-tweeked 
dedicated emagic environment. 
But now it'll never happen <sigh>.

Re: [L-OT] re: [OT] Premiere for FCP

2003-07-19 by Eric Baird

--- In logic-ot@yahoogroups.com, itsplayed wrote:
> >...
> >   ....by the way
> can I have your permission to use the title
> "happy-happy-appley front ends" on my current
> instrumental?
> -Steve


<laughs> go ahead!

Maybe emagic could do educational music teaching software for toddler 
groups with simple bright-colour animations that bounce around on an 
iMac screen in time to the music as the teacher directs them

"OK, children, sing along .. I'm a Happy, Clappy Apple ... "

[dammit, I can really see this working, now I'm scaring myself]

Re: [L-OT] re: [OT] Premiere for FCP

2003-07-19 by itsplayed

--- Eric Baird <eric_baird@...> wrote:
> --- In logic-ot@yahoogroups.com, itsplayed wrote:
> > >...
> > >   ....by the way
> > can I have your permission to use the title
> > "happy-happy-appley front ends" on my current
> > instrumental?
> > -Steve
> 
> 
> <laughs> go ahead!
> 
> Maybe emagic could do educational music teaching
> software for toddler 
> groups with simple bright-colour animations that
> bounce around on an 
> iMac screen in time to the music as the teacher
> directs them
> 
> "OK, children, sing along .. I'm a Happy, Clappy
> Apple ... "
> 
> [dammit, I can really see this working, now I'm
> scaring myself]
> 
>  Sure, Why not? It's an untapped resourse. I say
Reel them in while there young.
-Steve
> 
> 


__________________________________
Do you Yahoo!?
SBC Yahoo! DSL - Now only $29.95 per month!
http://sbc.yahoo.com

Re: [L-OT] re: [OT] Premiere for FCP

2003-07-20 by Eric Baird

--- In logic-ot@yahoogroups.com, itsplayed wrote:
> ... 
> Sure, Why not? It's an untapped resourse. I say
> Reel them in while there young.

I still think they missed a trick by not hooking up with Disney to 
supply the kiddie market with iMacs with big black plastic sticky-out 
mouse ears, that boot up with a big cartoon face. 
They could have had two models to start with, a "Mickey Mac" and 
a "Minnie Mac", that mac enthusiasts could buy for their kids (or for 
themselves as a kitch design statement).

Or they could have tied up with Warner Bros instead, so when you 
power down, you get that boing sound and big "That's all, Folks" 
thing on the screen.
"Deede deede de de de de dededede"
"Deedle ee de de Deeeee (-ee-ee)!"


The educational division could have their own bright yellow "smiley" 
version of the Apple logo.

[Erk]
: "The 'Happy Apple" logo is a trademark of Apple Kids"

Re: [L-OT] re: [OT] Premiere for FCP

2003-07-20 by Oblivian | Bacteria AS

On Friday, July 18, 2003, at 08:01 AM, Eric Baird wrote:
> > > Who here thinks that logic is now a better suite for
> > > losing Windows support? And for not supporting OSX VST?
> > > And for losing the option of supporting UNIX?

In logic-ot@yahoogroups.com, mercutio wrote:
> > first one - I think it has to be better. Many things that
> > are kludgy about Logic probably had to do with keeping a
> > generalized design that could quickly compile to both
> > platforms.

What good will excellent code in Logic do if no one releases software for
it? When the OS vendor is also making the software it is isolating itself
(Logic) from the market. At best you are stuck with plugins from Apple.
Apple competes with NI, Steinberg, Waves, MOTU, etc. The plugins Emagic has
released earlier is great, but not versetile or, in my view, good enough
compared to what "more dedicated" plugins/ss companies make.

Re: [L-OT] re: [OT] Premiere for FCP

2003-07-20 by mercutio

On Saturday, July 19, 2003, at 09:37 AM, Eric Baird wrote:

> Thing is ... after we've paid the price, in terms of losing the cross-
> platform stuff, are emagic actually then going to go ahead and
> redesign this great user-interface that we are waiting for, or are
> they going to decide that the payoff isn't worth it at this late
> stage, and keep the program pretty much as it already is?

a good question - I am hopeful that there is some of the old Atari 
spirit left at Emagic and that they will really spiff up the 
performance, interface etc now that there is an opportunity. (i.e. they 
only have to worry about 1 OS). Quicktime integration has needed 
improvement for a long time.  That's a big one for me. I just hope they 
do it.

> In fact, we never even got support for basic stuff like program
> changes or mono mode!

> optimised operating system partly redesigned by emagic, and a new
> architecture, and the new focus on a single operating system ... it
> still doesn't seem to be stable! :-)

Hard to say - I only use X for my live rig. It grumbles now and then 
but never crashes. I work the program much harder under 9.2.2 - with 
the usual grumbles and it still tries to "save my song" too often for 
my liking

> Of coursed, perhaps emagic are still struggling with cross-platform
> code in order to be able to support both OSX and OS9, and perhaps we
> won't see the real advantages until they go OSX-only. Which they
> don't seem to have any public timetable for. Hmm.

It is inevitable that they will have a final rev for 9 at some point - 
but I think they need to wait longer. For myself, I still use 9 for 
everyday work but imagine that I will try going X now that some of my 
favs from NI have gone AU. My "office" machine and live rig both run 
under X and I have to say that it is much much more fun in general than 
9, so I am looking forward to getting it all under X as soon as 
possible.

> I liked the idea of a logic-optimised version of UNIX with all the
> unneccessary stuff stripped out or pre-disabled, bundled
> with "logix", and I think a lot of musicians would have been very
> happy to have a music PC that simply boots up into a pre-tweeked
> dedicated emagic environment.
> But now it'll never happen <sigh>.

Well, to do the things that we all do in a program like Logic, I think 
there has to be an elegant graphic shell on top of whatever flavor of 
UNIX. My feeling is that X is pretty good - but I agree with you about 
wanting some lean mean performer without too much eye candy or 
overhead. Makes you yearn for Be, doesn't it?

Re: [L-OT] re: [OT] Premiere for FCP

2003-07-21 by mercutio

On Sunday, July 20, 2003, at 12:03 AM, Oblivian | Bacteria AS wrote:

> What good will excellent code in Logic do if no one releases software 
> for
> it? When the OS vendor is also making the software it is isolating 
> itself
> (Logic) from the market. At best you are stuck with plugins from Apple.
> Apple competes with NI, Steinberg, Waves, MOTU, etc. The plugins 
> Emagic has
> released earlier is great, but not versetile or, in my view, good 
> enough
> compared to what "more dedicated" plugins/ss companies make.
>
Don't know what you mean really - I just ordered some AU plugs from NI 
- it has taken some time for the plug makers to come around but now 
they are showing up. My feeling is that plug makers who won't write for 
Mac wouldn't have done so even if Logic was still cross platform.

Re: [L-OT] re: [OT] Premiere for FCP

2003-07-21 by Oblivian | Bacteria AS

> On Sunday, July 20, 2003, at 12:03 AM, Oblivian | Bacteria AS wrote:
>> What good will excellent code in Logic do if no one releases software
<snip>

On Monday, July 21, 2003 8:54 AM, <mercutio> wrote:
> Don't know what you mean really - I just ordered some AU plugs from NI
> - it has taken some time for the plug makers to come around but now
> they are showing up. My feeling is that plug makers who won't write
> for Mac wouldn't have done so even if Logic was still cross platform.

It is a future scenario, not a current. The point is that Apple competes
with NI making software samplers and softsynths, against Waves on misc.
plugins, Steinberg on software samplers, plugins and hosts, MOTU on hosts. I
can't see what good comes out of that.

Re: [L-OT] re: [OT] Premiere for FCP

2003-07-21 by Dennis Gunn

>It is a future scenario, not a current. The point is that Apple competes
>with NI making software samplers and softsynths, against Waves on misc.
>plugins, Steinberg on software samplers, plugins and hosts, MOTU on hosts. I
>can't see what good comes out of that.

How about this good: if apple (emagic) didn't do it, there would 
basically not be enough plugins and softsamplers to be able to do any 
work in OSX at all right now?

NI and waves both have better compressors and better instruments than 
are available from apple.  All they have to do to be perfectly 
competitive is simply unthumb their buttholes and make them available.

Re: [L-OT] re: [OT] Premiere for FCP

2003-07-21 by mercutio

On Monday, July 21, 2003, at 05:38 AM, Oblivian | Bacteria AS wrote:

> It is a future scenario, not a current. The point is that Apple 
> competes
> with NI making software samplers and softsynths, against Waves on misc.
> plugins, Steinberg on software samplers, plugins and hosts, MOTU on 
> hosts. I
> can't see what good comes out of that.
>
Yes it is a confusing world - but let me say this: I used to buy on 
"future" considerations. But now I buy on what I need "now".  As far as 
competition is concerned: I don't care if it is Apple or Emagic 
competing against the rest. As long as they all see the need to top 
each other, see the need to keep pace, then I as a consumer will 
benefit.

As for the Emagic-Apple alliance....  I keep using Logic until someone 
else blows me away - just like I used Performer until Notator blew me 
away on a "marginal" platform (Atari). In other words, a few plugs are 
not going to make me switch to a)Cubase and b) PC. Why on earth should 
it?

btw - if you think that MOTU is the creme of hosts... please think RME  
:-)

Re: [L-OT] re: [OT] Premiere for FCP

2003-07-22 by Oblivian | Bacteria AS

On Tuesday, July 22, 2003 12:19 AM, <mercutio> wrote:
> As for the Emagic-Apple alliance....  I keep using Logic until someone
> else blows me away - just like I used Performer until Notator blew me
> away on a "marginal" platform (Atari). In other words, a few plugs are
> not going to make me switch to a)Cubase and b) PC. Why on earth should
> it?

No of course not, at least not for the moment. Today, there's no reason to
make any considerations either way, other than OS9 -> OSX perhaps. I am on
PC and is still using Logic, but I have bought Cubase SX too. And even
though I haven't spent that many hours with Cubase yet, I must say the audio
part in SX feels "better" than in Logic. More solid. Still there's obvious
things SX lacks wich is so basic in Logic. Logic also solves some audio,
especially the mixer integration more elegant than Cubase. But, ultimately I
think I'll go Cubase sometime in the future, when it has better MIDI support
and Logic for PC is outdated. One thing I don't quite understand though; is
the coming VST3 and AU conquerent systems or wont VST3 ever be released for
OSX?

> btw - if you think that MOTU is the creme of hosts... please think RME
> :-)

Hehe! No I don't concider MOTU creme of anything. My experience with MOTU is
rather bad. Poor drivers and terrible or non-existing support. I have sent
emails to MOTU which I think should qualify for the ho ho hotel. ;-)

Move to quarantaine

This moves the raw source file on disk only. The archive index is not changed automatically, so you still need to run a manual refresh afterward.