I am glad I have it, and it is my backup DAW should Sonar eventually stop working. ![]() So, it's a perfectly useful DAW that will do everything you need, has a bit of a learning curve for Sonar users, and comes with lots of features and extras. The forums at Magix have people who respond and a decent amount of information. The included plugins are quite nice, the sample library is actually quite good, with lots of stuff included. ![]() The GUI is kind of drab and I'm not hugely keen on the layout or the color scheme, which can sometimes make it hard to differentiate between elements on the screen. The program is very, very mature and stable - no bugs, no crashes, no twitches of any kind (although some folks do report a bit of instability while scanning VSTs, I have not experienced this). Trying to figure out a way to bounce in real time has been surprisingly awkward. I found signal routing to be less intuitive than Sonar, and I've been having issues with bouncing midi tracks, as I find that sub-system to be both inefficient and not clearly designed, and when I am using my Play libraries I run into problems with fast bounce, as Play delivers intermittent sound when fast bouncing. It is taking me a while to get completely comfortable with it, though. ![]() ![]() It's very powerful, and the audio side is good, and the midi side is very decent and perfectly useable (but not as good as Sonar, in my opinion). I've owned Samplitude for a year, and have begun to learn it more seriously since Cakewalk's announcement.
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