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Would someone please explain direct monitoring? [message #89553] Sun, 09 September 2007 12:08 Go to next message
emarenot is currently offline  emarenot   UNITED STATES
Messages: 345
Registered: June 2005
Senior Member
This is a multi-part message in MIME format.

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Man, I'm so used to Paris that I've not really had to wrap my head around
this direct monitoring thing. I've been trying all morning to find some
sort of explanation that made sense. The RME site has some info, but how
the heck does a piece of software, on top of a piece of software LOWER the
latency (Total Mix "on top of" Cubase for example)?? Is the best way to
think about it to conceptualize Total Mix as functioning like an external
mix board: a pre-recorded track from Cubase is routed to an input on the mix
board and the signal to be recorded is bussed to a monitor out? I don't
know why this is so difficult for me to grasp -probably over thinking it....
(or maybe not enough Scotch?)
Thanks.
MR

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<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Man, I'm so used to Paris that I've not =
really had=20
to wrap my head around this direct monitoring thing.&nbsp; I've been =
trying all=20
morning to find some sort of explanation that made sense.&nbsp; The RME =
site has=20
some info, but how the heck does a piece of software, on top of a piece =
of=20
software LOWER the latency (Total Mix "on top of" Cubase for =
example)??&nbsp; Is=20
the best way to think about it to conceptualize Total Mix as functioning =
like an=20
external mix board: a pre-recorded track from Cubase is routed to an =
input on=20
the mix board and the signal to be recorded is bussed to a monitor =
out?&nbsp; I=20
don't know why this is so difficult for me to grasp -probably over =
thinking=20
it.... (or maybe not enough Scotch?)</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Thanks.</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>MR</FONT></DIV></BODY></HTML>

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Re: Would someone please explain direct monitoring? [message #89557 is a reply to message #89553] Sun, 09 September 2007 11:57 Go to previous messageGo to next message
LaMontt  is currently offline  LaMontt   
Messages: 424
Registered: January 2007
Senior Member

Mike..Direct Monitoring is very important if your running a Native based DAW..
Right now on Nunendo.com there's a Big discusion with high-end users Like
Brian T and others along with Steinberg as why they can't can't achive near
zero talking .5ms-1.5(rountrip)(latency with the current technology-high
speed dual-dual core processors.

Yes, in Paris we have been spoiled with the best DAW latency in the business.
But, you know the Paris story. And, most folk are hell bent on a Native based
solution that can topple Pro Tools and Paris mixing and routing power..

Having said all of that, the best way (Like BrianT) states to achieve near
-zero latency in a native DAW is to add a mixer(analog or Digital) . This
would ensure absolutly no latency when tracking. Inthe case of BrianT , his
facily uses a Euphonix System 5 mixers(2)..Which Btw does(System 5) most
of EQing and Compression chores. So the strain to have the DAW do everthing
is minimal.

Products like Total Mix (RME) Cue mix (Motu) address the Native DAW latency
issue by incorporating so clever Mixer routing "outside " of the DAW. In
other words, acting as an Digital Mixer with in a PC/MAC , yet able to route
audio to and fro to the Native App..

Today Apoggee is claming 1.6 ms latency(round trip) when using it's Symphony
PCI-E cards. Daisy chaining them up to 96 channels each way (192) total.
This a hugh leap in native Land. This put the user back into the Paris ,
Pro Tools realm of flexibily ..

http://www.apogeedigital.com/products/symphony_performance.p hp

The Apogee solution is not cheap by know means..

We thought that by now we'd be using 64 bit everything(OS,DAW, Plugins..etc)
but, most of DAW companies have not figured it out or liek Steinberg, have
balked on a complete re-write of the ASIO /VST code. Now, today they Steinberg
realizes it's behind..Way behind.

Apple: Apple who owns Logic Audio decide 4 years ago , to forgo the current
24bit,32 bit float coding techniques of today, and start fresh with a fresh
64 bit OS, along with a fresh 64 bit Pro Audio/Video app with 64 bit plugins.
Yes,they've(Apple) taken some PR hits in the last couple of years, but I
think their decision to take a step back..look at the BIG picture, will pay
dividends and put them in a new NATIVE standard,with near zero 1.6 ms DAW
level, on their 8 & 16 core Personal computers(Macs)using the Apogee Symphony
setup.

I'm aproud Paris owner and user(even Today) along with Nuendo, Pro Tools
and even Logic (PC!@#$)..

My heart is telling me that as far as the Native race, Apple is going to
win out. Even with some issues with core-auio., when they go 64 bit OS and
follwoing their APPS (Final Cut Pro, Logic Pro 8). Their strategic partnership
with Apogee makes for an force to be reckoned with.

Then again, there's always Digidesign. Who has the lion share of the Pro
Auio market.


Ensuring that they not only have grreat work flow, but great sound I/O..

Sorry for the long response.

"Mike R." <emarenot@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
>
>Man, I'm so used to Paris that I've not really had to wrap my head around
>this direct monitoring thing. I've been trying all morning to find some
>sort of explanation that made sense. The RME site has some info, but how
>the heck does a piece of software, on top of a piece of software LOWER the
>latency (Total Mix "on top of" Cubase for example)?? Is the best way to
>think about it to conceptualize Total Mix as functioning like an external
>mix board: a pre-recorded track from Cubase is routed to an input on the
mix
>board and the signal to be recorded is bussed to a monitor out? I don't
>know why this is so difficult for me to grasp -probably over thinking it....
>(or maybe not enough Scotch?)
>Thanks.
>MR
>
>
><!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN">
><HTML><HEAD>
><META http-equiv=3DContent-Type content=3D"text/html; =
>charset=3Diso-8859-1">
><META content=3D"MSHTML 6.00.2800.1555" name=3DGENERATOR>
><STYLE></STYLE>
></HEAD>
><BODY bgColor=3D#ffffff>
><DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Man, I'm so used to Paris that I've not
=
>really had=20
>to wrap my head around this direct monitoring thing.  I've been =
>trying all=20
>morning to find some sort of explanation that made sense.  The RME =
>site has=20
>some info, but how the heck does a piece of software, on top of a piece
=
>of=20
>software LOWER the latency (Total Mix "on top of" Cubase for =
>example)??  Is=20
>the best way to think about it to conceptualize Total Mix as functioning
=
>like an=20
>external mix board: a pre-recorded track from Cubase is routed to an =
>input on=20
>the mix board and the signal to be recorded is bussed to a monitor =
>out?  I=20
>don't know why this is so difficult for me to grasp -probably over =
>thinking=20
>it.... (or maybe not enough Scotch?)</FONT></DIV>
><DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Thanks.</FONT></DIV>
><DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>MR</FONT></DIV></BODY></HTML>
>
>
Re: Would someone please explain direct monitoring? [message #89558 is a reply to message #89553] Sun, 09 September 2007 11:52 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Bill L is currently offline  Bill L   UNITED STATES
Messages: 766
Registered: August 2006
Senior Member
Mike, if you're drinking Scotch at 3:00 in the afternoon, figuring out
direct monitoring is not your real problem.

But if that was just a joke, then look at it like this: certain sound
cards/boxes have a built in simple digital mixer, which routes the
incoming signals various ways at the same time as it sends it to Cubase,
Logic, etc. Because DAWs cannot yet avoid latency in inputting,
processing and outputting a signal, this is the only effective way for a
soundcard/box to give no-latency monitoring. Just think of it as a mixer.

Mike R. wrote:
> Man, I'm so used to Paris that I've not really had to wrap my head
> around this direct monitoring thing. I've been trying all morning to
> find some sort of explanation that made sense. The RME site has some
> info, but how the heck does a piece of software, on top of a piece of
> software LOWER the latency (Total Mix "on top of" Cubase for example)??
> Is the best way to think about it to conceptualize Total Mix as
> functioning like an external mix board: a pre-recorded track from Cubase
> is routed to an input on the mix board and the signal to be recorded is
> bussed to a monitor out? I don't know why this is so difficult for me
> to grasp -probably over thinking it.... (or maybe not enough Scotch?)
> Thanks.
> MR
Re: Would someone please explain direct monitoring? [message #89559 is a reply to message #89558] Sun, 09 September 2007 16:01 Go to previous messageGo to next message
emarenot is currently offline  emarenot   UNITED STATES
Messages: 345
Registered: June 2005
Senior Member
Hey Bill,
Thanks for the reply -and the thought. Your post and LaMont's were very
helpful.
MR


"Bill L" <bill@billlorentzen.com> wrote in message news:46e442b6@linux...
> Mike, if you're drinking Scotch at 3:00 in the afternoon, figuring out
> direct monitoring is not your real problem.
>
> But if that was just a joke, then look at it like this: certain sound
> cards/boxes have a built in simple digital mixer, which routes the
> incoming signals various ways at the same time as it sends it to Cubase,
> Logic, etc. Because DAWs cannot yet avoid latency in inputting,
> processing and outputting a signal, this is the only effective way for a
> soundcard/box to give no-latency monitoring. Just think of it as a mixer.
>
> Mike R. wrote:
> > Man, I'm so used to Paris that I've not really had to wrap my head
> > around this direct monitoring thing. I've been trying all morning to
> > find some sort of explanation that made sense. The RME site has some
> > info, but how the heck does a piece of software, on top of a piece of
> > software LOWER the latency (Total Mix "on top of" Cubase for example)??
> > Is the best way to think about it to conceptualize Total Mix as
> > functioning like an external mix board: a pre-recorded track from Cubase
> > is routed to an input on the mix board and the signal to be recorded is
> > bussed to a monitor out? I don't know why this is so difficult for me
> > to grasp -probably over thinking it.... (or maybe not enough Scotch?)
> > Thanks.
> > MR
Re: Would someone please explain direct monitoring? [message #89560 is a reply to message #89557] Sun, 09 September 2007 16:07 Go to previous messageGo to next message
emarenot is currently offline  emarenot   UNITED STATES
Messages: 345
Registered: June 2005
Senior Member
Hey LaMont
Thanks for the reply. Very helpful. I appreciate the overview on the state
of the DAW world. Its so weird, as I guess the Steinway group is noting,
that these DAWs can't get the latency down to Paris/Pro Tools levels. Paris
was doing it with what has to be, by now, a pretty low tech card.
MR

"LaMont" <jjdpro@gmail.com> wrote in message news:46e4422b$1@linux...
>
> Mike..Direct Monitoring is very important if your running a Native based
DAW..
> Right now on Nunendo.com there's a Big discusion with high-end users Like
> Brian T and others along with Steinberg as why they can't can't achive
near
> zero talking .5ms-1.5(rountrip)(latency with the current technology-high
> speed dual-dual core processors.
>
> Yes, in Paris we have been spoiled with the best DAW latency in the
business.
> But, you know the Paris story. And, most folk are hell bent on a Native
based
> solution that can topple Pro Tools and Paris mixing and routing power..
>
> Having said all of that, the best way (Like BrianT) states to achieve near
> -zero latency in a native DAW is to add a mixer(analog or Digital) . This
> would ensure absolutly no latency when tracking. Inthe case of BrianT ,
his
> facily uses a Euphonix System 5 mixers(2)..Which Btw does(System 5) most
> of EQing and Compression chores. So the strain to have the DAW do
everthing
> is minimal.
>
> Products like Total Mix (RME) Cue mix (Motu) address the Native DAW
latency
> issue by incorporating so clever Mixer routing "outside " of the DAW. In
> other words, acting as an Digital Mixer with in a PC/MAC , yet able to
route
> audio to and fro to the Native App..
>
> Today Apoggee is claming 1.6 ms latency(round trip) when using it's
Symphony
> PCI-E cards. Daisy chaining them up to 96 channels each way (192) total.
> This a hugh leap in native Land. This put the user back into the Paris ,
> Pro Tools realm of flexibily ..
>
> http://www.apogeedigital.com/products/symphony_performance.p hp
>
> The Apogee solution is not cheap by know means..
>
> We thought that by now we'd be using 64 bit everything(OS,DAW,
Plugins..etc)
> but, most of DAW companies have not figured it out or liek Steinberg, have
> balked on a complete re-write of the ASIO /VST code. Now, today they
Steinberg
> realizes it's behind..Way behind.
>
> Apple: Apple who owns Logic Audio decide 4 years ago , to forgo the
current
> 24bit,32 bit float coding techniques of today, and start fresh with a
fresh
> 64 bit OS, along with a fresh 64 bit Pro Audio/Video app with 64 bit
plugins.
> Yes,they've(Apple) taken some PR hits in the last couple of years, but I
> think their decision to take a step back..look at the BIG picture, will
pay
> dividends and put them in a new NATIVE standard,with near zero 1.6 ms DAW
> level, on their 8 & 16 core Personal computers(Macs)using the Apogee
Symphony
> setup.
>
> I'm aproud Paris owner and user(even Today) along with Nuendo, Pro Tools
> and even Logic (PC!@#$)..
>
> My heart is telling me that as far as the Native race, Apple is going to
> win out. Even with some issues with core-auio., when they go 64 bit OS and
> follwoing their APPS (Final Cut Pro, Logic Pro 8). Their strategic
partnership
> with Apogee makes for an force to be reckoned with.
>
> Then again, there's always Digidesign. Who has the lion share of the Pro
> Auio market.
>
>
> Ensuring that they not only have grreat work flow, but great sound I/O..
>
> Sorry for the long response.
>
> "Mike R." <emarenot@yahoo.com> wrote:
> >
> >
> >Man, I'm so used to Paris that I've not really had to wrap my head around
> >this direct monitoring thing. I've been trying all morning to find some
> >sort of explanation that made sense. The RME site has some info, but how
> >the heck does a piece of software, on top of a piece of software LOWER
the
> >latency (Total Mix "on top of" Cubase for example)?? Is the best way to
> >think about it to conceptualize Total Mix as functioning like an external
> >mix board: a pre-recorded track from Cubase is routed to an input on the
> mix
> >board and the signal to be recorded is bussed to a monitor out? I don't
> >know why this is so difficult for me to grasp -probably over thinking
it....
> >(or maybe not enough Scotch?)
> >Thanks.
> >MR
> >
> >
> ><!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN">
> ><HTML><HEAD>
> ><META http-equiv=3DContent-Type content=3D"text/html; =
> >charset=3Diso-8859-1">
> ><META content=3D"MSHTML 6.00.2800.1555" name=3DGENERATOR>
> ><STYLE></STYLE>
> ></HEAD>
> ><BODY bgColor=3D#ffffff>
> ><DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Man, I'm so used to Paris that I've not
> =
> >really had=20
> >to wrap my head around this direct monitoring thing. I've been =
> >trying all=20
> >morning to find some sort of explanation that made sense. The RME =
> >site has=20
> >some info, but how the heck does a piece of software, on top of a piece
> =
> >of=20
> >software LOWER the latency (Total Mix "on top of" Cubase for =
> >example)?? Is=20
> >the best way to think about it to conceptualize Total Mix as functioning
> =
> >like an=20
> >external mix board: a pre-recorded track from Cubase is routed to an =
> >input on=20
> >the mix board and the signal to be recorded is bussed to a monitor =
> >out? I=20
> >don't know why this is so difficult for me to grasp -probably over =
> >thinking=20
> >it.... (or maybe not enough Scotch?)</FONT></DIV>
> ><DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Thanks.</FONT></DIV>
> ><DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>MR</FONT></DIV></BODY></HTML>
> >
> >
>
Re: Would someone please explain direct monitoring? [message #89561 is a reply to message #89557] Sun, 09 September 2007 13:25 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Dedric Terry is currently offline  Dedric Terry   UNITED STATES
Messages: 788
Registered: June 2007
Senior Member
Lamont -

On 9/9/07 12:57 PM, in article 46e4422b$1@linux, "LaMont" <jjdpro@gmail.com>
wrote:

>
> Mike..Direct Monitoring is very important if your running a Native based DAW..
> Right now on Nunendo.com there's a Big discusion with high-end users Like
> Brian T and others along with Steinberg as why they can't can't achive near
> zero talking .5ms-1.5(rountrip)(latency with the current technology-high
> speed dual-dual core processors.
>
That has to do with scaling on multiple processors, not the driver, or the
direct monitoring concept or implementation. I'll address the reasons why
ProTools and Paris have lower latency, but where you pay the price for it in
another reply to Mike's post.

> We thought that by now we'd be using 64 bit everything(OS,DAW, Plugins..etc)
> but, most of DAW companies have not figured it out or liek Steinberg, have
> balked on a complete re-write of the ASIO /VST code. Now, today they Steinberg
> realizes it's behind..Way behind.
>
Lamont - you might want to scroll back through the forum a bit and read
where Chris Ludwig said that ASIO still runs a bit lower latency and more
efficiently than other drivers (Core audio comparable to WDM with Sonar, but
ASIO having lower cpu overhead for the same latency). Apogee uses Core
audio, and the last comment I read from a DAW builder wasn't overly
impressed with the Symphony solution. ASIO and VST aren't way behind
anything. Research a little better please.

> Apple: Apple who owns Logic Audio decide 4 years ago , to forgo the current
> 24bit,32 bit float coding techniques of today, and start fresh with a fresh
> 64 bit OS, along with a fresh 64 bit Pro Audio/Video app with 64 bit plugins.
> Yes,they've(Apple) taken some PR hits in the last couple of years, but I
> think their decision to take a step back..look at the BIG picture, will pay
> dividends and put them in a new NATIVE standard,with near zero 1.6 ms DAW
> level, on their 8 & 16 core Personal computers(Macs)using the Apogee Symphony
> setup.

I am almost positive Logic is still a 32-bit float audio engine, which is
completely independant of a 64-bit OS (memory/data handling, application
coding). In SOS Joe Bryan of Univ. Audio stated that there are
disadvantages to 64-bit audio esp. for plugins, not just a blanket more bits
are better.

Also, regarding the 1.6ms round trip, Steinberg's VSL2020 interface has/had
0.7ms latency years ago, and if you can find one, it still does - that's
ASIO. Lynx cards are also running slightly lower latency than RME on some
systems (Nuendo, Cubase, etc) and can achieve 1.5ms roundtrip (probably less
than another 0.1ms for converters). With Samplitude/Sequoia, RME runs lower
than Lynx.
>
> My heart is telling me that as far as the Native race, Apple is going to
> win out. Even with some issues with core-auio., when they go 64 bit OS and
> follwoing their APPS (Final Cut Pro, Logic Pro 8). Their strategic partnership
> with Apogee makes for an force to be reckoned with.

I wouldn't jump so fast. Certainly Apple has the advantage of the whole
package in house, but read the above paragraphs before proclaiming
Apogee/Apple as the current king of low latency. The Apogee system was one
I have watched in considering a Mac at some point mainly to see if it had
any better performance than an RME or Lynx system, being a Core audio
system, but so far that doesn't seem to be bearing out in reality, just in
marketing.

Dedric

>
> Then again, there's always Digidesign. Who has the lion share of the Pro
> Auio market.
>
>
> Ensuring that they not only have grreat work flow, but great sound I/O..
>
> Sorry for the long response.
>
> "Mike R." <emarenot@yahoo.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>> Man, I'm so used to Paris that I've not really had to wrap my head around
>> this direct monitoring thing. I've been trying all morning to find some
>> sort of explanation that made sense. The RME site has some info, but how
>> the heck does a piece of software, on top of a piece of software LOWER the
>> latency (Total Mix "on top of" Cubase for example)?? Is the best way to
>> think about it to conceptualize Total Mix as functioning like an external
>> mix board: a pre-recorded track from Cubase is routed to an input on the
> mix
>> board and the signal to be recorded is bussed to a monitor out? I don't
>> know why this is so difficult for me to grasp -probably over thinking it....
>> (or maybe not enough Scotch?)
>> Thanks.
>> MR
>>
>>
>> <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN">
>> <HTML><HEAD>
>> <META http-equiv=3DContent-Type content=3D"text/html; =
>> charset=3Diso-8859-1">
>> <META content=3D"MSHTML 6.00.2800.1555" name=3DGENERATOR>
>> <STYLE></STYLE>
>> </HEAD>
>> <BODY bgColor=3D#ffffff>
>> <DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Man, I'm so used to Paris that I've not
> =
>> really had=20
>> to wrap my head around this direct monitoring thing.  I've been =
>> trying all=20
>> morning to find some sort of explanation that made sense.  The RME =
>> site has=20
>> some info, but how the heck does a piece of software, on top of a piece
> =
>> of=20
>> software LOWER the latency (Total Mix "on top of" Cubase for =
>> example)??  Is=20
>> the best way to think about it to conceptualize Total Mix as functioning
> =
>> like an=20
>> external mix board: a pre-recorded track from Cubase is routed to an =
>> input on=20
>> the mix board and the signal to be recorded is bussed to a monitor =
>> out?  I=20
>> don't know why this is so difficult for me to grasp -probably over =
>> thinking=20
>> it.... (or maybe not enough Scotch?)</FONT></DIV>
>> <DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Thanks.</FONT></DIV>
>> <DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>MR</FONT></DIV></BODY></HTML>
>>
>>
>
Re: Would someone please explain direct monitoring? [message #89562 is a reply to message #89561] Sun, 09 September 2007 14:14 Go to previous messageGo to next message
excelav is currently offline  excelav   
Messages: 2130
Registered: July 2005
Location: Metro Detroit
Senior Member
Dedric Terry <dterry@keyofd.net> wrote:
>Lamont -
>
>On 9/9/07 12:57 PM, in article 46e4422b$1@linux, "LaMont" <jjdpro@gmail.com>
>wrote:
>
>>
>> Mike..Direct Monitoring is very important if your running a Native based
DAW..
>> Right now on Nunendo.com there's a Big discusion with high-end users Like
>> Brian T and others along with Steinberg as why they can't can't achive
near
>> zero talking .5ms-1.5(rountrip)(latency with the current technology-high
>> speed dual-dual core processors.
>>
>That has to do with scaling on multiple processors, not the driver, or the
>direct monitoring concept or implementation. I'll address the reasons why
>ProTools and Paris have lower latency, but where you pay the price for it
in
>another reply to Mike's post.
>
>> We thought that by now we'd be using 64 bit everything(OS,DAW, Plugins..etc)
>> but, most of DAW companies have not figured it out or liek Steinberg,
have
>> balked on a complete re-write of the ASIO /VST code. Now, today they Steinberg
>> realizes it's behind..Way behind.
>>
>Lamont - you might want to scroll back through the forum a bit and read
>where Chris Ludwig said that ASIO still runs a bit lower latency and more
>efficiently than other drivers (Core audio comparable to WDM with Sonar,
but
>ASIO having lower cpu overhead for the same latency). Apogee uses Core
>audio, and the last comment I read from a DAW builder wasn't overly
>impressed with the Symphony solution. ASIO and VST aren't way behind
>anything. Research a little better please.

That's a bit of a blanket statement, most are not impressed because of the
price of Synphony, not the performance.

>
>> Apple: Apple who owns Logic Audio decide 4 years ago , to forgo the current
>> 24bit,32 bit float coding techniques of today, and start fresh with a
fresh
>> 64 bit OS, along with a fresh 64 bit Pro Audio/Video app with 64 bit plugins.
>> Yes,they've(Apple) taken some PR hits in the last couple of years, but
I
>> think their decision to take a step back..look at the BIG picture, will
pay
>> dividends and put them in a new NATIVE standard,with near zero 1.6 ms
DAW
>> level, on their 8 & 16 core Personal computers(Macs)using the Apogee Symphony
>> setup.
>
>I am almost positive Logic is still a 32-bit float audio engine, which is
>completely independant of a 64-bit OS (memory/data handling, application
>coding). In SOS Joe Bryan of Univ. Audio stated that there are
>disadvantages to 64-bit audio esp. for plugins, not just a blanket more
bits
>are better.

The disadvantage is, processing power, space, bandwidth, and the fact that
they and their hardware are not ready for 64bit yet, just wait.

>
>Also, regarding the 1.6ms round trip, Steinberg's VSL2020 interface has/had
>0.7ms latency years ago, and if you can find one, it still does - that's
>ASIO. Lynx cards are also running slightly lower latency than RME on some
>systems (Nuendo, Cubase, etc) and can achieve 1.5ms roundtrip (probably
less
>than another 0.1ms for converters). With Samplitude/Sequoia, RME runs lower
>than Lynx.

The Steinberg VSL 2020 was a 32 ch. Adat card, The Symphony system is 1.7
ms. analog to analog. With Symphony it's 192 simultaneous audio ch. at 1.7
MS. To minimize what Symphony can do is not right.

>>
>> My heart is telling me that as far as the Native race, Apple is going
to
>> win out. Even with some issues with core-auio., when they go 64 bit OS
and
>> follwoing their APPS (Final Cut Pro, Logic Pro 8). Their strategic partnership
>> with Apogee makes for an force to be reckoned with.
>
>I wouldn't jump so fast. Certainly Apple has the advantage of the whole
>package in house, but read the above paragraphs before proclaiming
>Apogee/Apple as the current king of low latency. The Apogee system was
one
>I have watched in considering a Mac at some point mainly to see if it had
>any better performance than an RME or Lynx system, being a Core audio
>system, but so far that doesn't seem to be bearing out in reality, just
in
>marketing.
>
>Dedric

Well Dedric, since Apogee's claims are false and nothing more than marketing
hype, maybe a lawsuit is in order.

>
>>
>> Then again, there's always Digidesign. Who has the lion share of the Pro
>> Auio market.
>>
>>
>> Ensuring that they not only have grreat work flow, but great sound I/O..
>>
>> Sorry for the long response.
>>
>> "Mike R." <emarenot@yahoo.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>> Man, I'm so used to Paris that I've not really had to wrap my head around
>>> this direct monitoring thing. I've been trying all morning to find some
>>> sort of explanation that made sense. The RME site has some info, but
how
>>> the heck does a piece of software, on top of a piece of software LOWER
the
>>> latency (Total Mix "on top of" Cubase for example)?? Is the best way
to
>>> think about it to conceptualize Total Mix as functioning like an external
>>> mix board: a pre-recorded track from Cubase is routed to an input on
the
>> mix
>>> board and the signal to be recorded is bussed to a monitor out? I don't
>>> know why this is so difficult for me to grasp -probably over thinking
it....
>>> (or maybe not enough Scotch?)
>>> Thanks.
>>> MR
>>>
>>>
>>> <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN">
>>> <HTML><HEAD>
>>> <META http-equiv=3DContent-Type content=3D"text/html; =
>>> charset=3Diso-8859-1">
>>> <META content=3D"MSHTML 6.00.2800.1555" name=3DGENERATOR>
>>> <STYLE></STYLE>
>>> </HEAD>
>>> <BODY bgColor=3D#ffffff>
>>> <DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Man, I'm so used to Paris that I've
not
>> =
>>> really had=20
>>> to wrap my head around this direct monitoring thing.  I've been =
>>> trying all=20
>>> morning to find some sort of explanation that made sense.  The RME =
>>> site has=20
>>> some info, but how the heck does a piece of software, on top of a piece
>> =
>>> of=20
>>> software LOWER the latency (Total Mix "on top of" Cubase for =
>>> example)??  Is=20
>>> the best way to think about it to conceptualize Total Mix as functioning
>> =
>>> like an=20
>>> external mix board: a pre-recorded track from Cubase is routed to an
=
>>> input on=20
>>> the mix board and the signal to be recorded is bussed to a monitor =
>>> out?  I=20
>>> don't know why this is so difficult for me to grasp -probably over =
>>> thinking=20
>>> it.... (or maybe not enough Scotch?)</FONT></DIV>
>>> <DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Thanks.</FONT></DIV>
>>> <DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>MR</FONT></DIV></BODY></HTML>
>>>
>>>
>>
>
Re: Would someone please explain direct monitoring? [message #89563 is a reply to message #89560] Sun, 09 September 2007 14:13 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Dedric Terry is currently offline  Dedric Terry   UNITED STATES
Messages: 788
Registered: June 2007
Senior Member
> Its so weird, as I guess the Steinway group is noting,
> that these DAWs can't get the latency down to Paris/Pro Tools levels. Paris
> was doing it with what has to be, by now, a pretty low tech card.
> MR

Mike - The reason Paris, Protools, and Soundscape/Mixtreme achieve lower
latency than software DAWs (Nuendo, Logic, Sonar, DP, etc) is that these are
direct hardware systems, not unlike a digital mixer a la DM2000 etc. The
downside, is that you can't run native applications or plugins directly on
the hardware itself, and you are limited to what the hardware manufacturer
and any 3rd parties develop specifically for it - the technology is also
frozen in time and keeping pace with technological advancements (better
processors, faster memory, and even better quality I/O is nearly impossible
and still maintain backwards compatibility - just ask PT Mix to HD
upgraders). Paris only ran it's own mixer and EDS plugins on the EDS cards,
but VST plugins are still native, and subject to internal latency and cpu
overhead. Hence we only had 16 tracks per EDS card. 100 tracks on a native
rig is nothing now.


My general DAW pros and cons response:

Though pretty much everyone here knows most of there, here is my take on all
of this since it's been discussed in part in different threads recently,
just because I'm bored, and hate to see misinformation distributed in pieces
here and there.....


HYBRID-HARDWARE (PT, Paris, Sydec/Soundscape):

The advantage to a hardware system is of course, lower latency and running
plugins on the hardware at lower latency (e.g. tracking with plugins).

The disadvantage is the systems are always proprietary (e.g. more costly,
including plugins), fixed processing capability (you have to add more DSP
cards to run more plugins, add more I/O, etc), and usually older technology.
ProTools is still using Motorola DSP chips, which are fine, but they are
ganging a dozen or so together to create processing, and you must divide
that dsp between the mixer, I/O and plugins. The plugin counts are about
half that for Universal Audio plugins vs. the exact same plugins on a UAD-1
card (e.g. the cost is twice, or more, per plugin to run on a TDM system vs.
a native system).

Despite what others say, the cost is in fact significantly higher with a
proprietary system unless you are happy with the fixed plugin load you can
achieve, I/O count, etc. If you want to expand, you have to upgrade, and
that is quite expensive. Digi's trade in program seems to be a decent deal,
but it's still quite expensive to get 64 tracks and a decent sized mix, not
counting the computer, which if you want to run anything native, needs to be
somewhat decent.

NATIVE:

One advantage to native is it is quite inexpensive to expand and upgrade,
and you choose your software, I/O card, I/O hardware, etc. Plugins are
usually 1/2 that of their TDM counterparts, or less. For the cost of an HD
card, you can build/buy two dual quad PCs or Macs and one of either will run
a higher plugin and track count than a single HD card (I've done the math on
this several times, so don't listen to the marketing hype: a single HD card
supports up to 96 simultaneous tracks at 44.1/48k - I can run that with
plugins on every track on my Nuendo rig - low latency, though I don't recall
how low I dropped it).

Hardware interface cards don't run the main DAW mixer or plugins locally -
they just pass I/O streams between the DAW software and outside world, so
there is a layer of drivers (ASIO, WDM, Coreaudio) between the hardware and
DAW.

The downside to native is latency in monitoring during tracking (whether
live monitoring for recording bands, or tracking VSTis, etc). During mixing
this isn't a big deal. Of course with faster cpus, you can run a more
complicated project (more I/O, more plugins), while maintaining low latency,
but as noted in a previous response there are multicore scaling issues with
Nuendo and Cubase at the moment preventing making use of the full potential
of dual quad cores, or to a lesser degree, dual dual cores.

There are tradeoffs both ways that extend far beyond the latency issue:
ProTools for composing/production just isn't happening for anyone I know.

It's a cool system, so I'm not knocking it in the least, just stating that
like anything, thinking it's the end-all be-all, or worse, proclaiming that
publicly is shortsighted, and a disservice to users considering the two
options (native or hardware). The reason higher end users are going native,
and the reason I'm running native, is that it affords me a significantly
more flexible and cost effective upgrade and compatibility path, and the
software I can use is significantly more powerful than any hybrid-hardware
solution, bar none. Anyone that says one (hardware or native) is ultimately
better than the other for any use either hasn't done their homework, or is
selling something. :-)

Use what works best for you of course, be it Paris, ProTools, Soundscape,
Nuendo, DP, Cubase, Logic, Sonar, Live, Reaper; Mac or PC; or a console and
tape. In the end, what we can accomplish now with very little investment is
incredible, no matter how you look at it.

Regards,
Dedric

On 9/9/07 5:07 PM, in article 46e452e6@linux, "Mike R." <emarenot@yahoo.com>
wrote:

> Hey LaMont
> Thanks for the reply. Very helpful. I appreciate the overview on the state
> of the DAW world. Its so weird, as I guess the Steinway group is noting,
> that these DAWs can't get the latency down to Paris/Pro Tools levels. Paris
> was doing it with what has to be, by now, a pretty low tech card.
> MR
>
> "LaMont" <jjdpro@gmail.com> wrote in message news:46e4422b$1@linux...
>>
>> Mike..Direct Monitoring is very important if your running a Native based
> DAW..
>> Right now on Nunendo.com there's a Big discusion with high-end users Like
>> Brian T and others along with Steinberg as why they can't can't achive
> near
>> zero talking .5ms-1.5(rountrip)(latency with the current technology-high
>> speed dual-dual core processors.
>>
>> Yes, in Paris we have been spoiled with the best DAW latency in the
> business.
>> But, you know the Paris story. And, most folk are hell bent on a Native
> based
>> solution that can topple Pro Tools and Paris mixing and routing power..
>>
>> Having said all of that, the best way (Like BrianT) states to achieve near
>> -zero latency in a native DAW is to add a mixer(analog or Digital) . This
>> would ensure absolutly no latency when tracking. Inthe case of BrianT ,
> his
>> facily uses a Euphonix System 5 mixers(2)..Which Btw does(System 5) most
>> of EQing and Compression chores. So the strain to have the DAW do
> everthing
>> is minimal.
>>
>> Products like Total Mix (RME) Cue mix (Motu) address the Native DAW
> latency
>> issue by incorporating so clever Mixer routing "outside " of the DAW. In
>> other words, acting as an Digital Mixer with in a PC/MAC , yet able to
> route
>> audio to and fro to the Native App..
>>
>> Today Apoggee is claming 1.6 ms latency(round trip) when using it's
> Symphony
>> PCI-E cards. Daisy chaining them up to 96 channels each way (192) total.
>> This a hugh leap in native Land. This put the user back into the Paris ,
>> Pro Tools realm of flexibily ..
>>
>> http://www.apogeedigital.com/products/symphony_performance.p hp
>>
>> The Apogee solution is not cheap by know means..
>>
>> We thought that by now we'd be using 64 bit everything(OS,DAW,
> Plugins..etc)
>> but, most of DAW companies have not figured it out or liek Steinberg, have
>> balked on a complete re-write of the ASIO /VST code. Now, today they
> Steinberg
>> realizes it's behind..Way behind.
>>
>> Apple: Apple who owns Logic Audio decide 4 years ago , to forgo the
> current
>> 24bit,32 bit float coding techniques of today, and start fresh with a
> fresh
>> 64 bit OS, along with a fresh 64 bit Pro Audio/Video app with 64 bit
> plugins.
>> Yes,they've(Apple) taken some PR hits in the last couple of years, but I
>> think their decision to take a step back..look at the BIG picture, will
> pay
>> dividends and put them in a new NATIVE standard,with near zero 1.6 ms DAW
>> level, on their 8 & 16 core Personal computers(Macs)using the Apogee
> Symphony
>> setup.
>>
>> I'm aproud Paris owner and user(even Today) along with Nuendo, Pro Tools
>> and even Logic (PC!@#$)..
>>
>> My heart is telling me that as far as the Native race, Apple is going to
>> win out. Even with some issues with core-auio., when they go 64 bit OS and
>> follwoing their APPS (Final Cut Pro, Logic Pro 8). Their strategic
> partnership
>> with Apogee makes for an force to be reckoned with.
>>
>> Then again, there's always Digidesign. Who has the lion share of the Pro
>> Auio market.
>>
>>
>> Ensuring that they not only have grreat work flow, but great sound I/O..
>>
>> Sorry for the long response.
>>
>> "Mike R." <emarenot@yahoo.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>> Man, I'm so used to Paris that I've not really had to wrap my head around
>>> this direct monitoring thing. I've been trying all morning to find some
>>> sort of explanation that made sense. The RME site has some info, but how
>>> the heck does a piece of software, on top of a piece of software LOWER
> the
>>> latency (Total Mix "on top of" Cubase for example)?? Is the best way to
>>> think about it to conceptualize Total Mix as functioning like an external
>>> mix board: a pre-recorded track from Cubase is routed to an input on the
>> mix
>>> board and the signal to be recorded is bussed to a monitor out? I don't
>>> know why this is so difficult for me to grasp -probably over thinking
> it....
>>> (or maybe not enough Scotch?)
>>> Thanks.
>>> MR
>>>
>>>
>>> <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN">
>>> <HTML><HEAD>
>>> <META http-equiv=3DContent-Type content=3D"text/html; =
>>> charset=3Diso-8859-1">
>>> <META content=3D"MSHTML 6.00.2800.1555" name=3DGENERATOR>
>>> <STYLE></STYLE>
>>> </HEAD>
>>> <BODY bgColor=3D#ffffff>
>>> <DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Man, I'm so used to Paris that I've not
>> =
>>> really had=20
>>> to wrap my head around this direct monitoring thing. I've been =
>>> trying all=20
>>> morning to find some sort of explanation that made sense. The RME =
>>> site has=20
>>> some info, but how the heck does a piece of software, on top of a piece
>> =
>>> of=20
>>> software LOWER the latency (Total Mix "on top of" Cubase for =
>>> example)?? Is=20
>>> the best way to think about it to conceptualize Total Mix as functioning
>> =
>>> like an=20
>>> external mix board: a pre-recorded track from Cubase is routed to an =
>>> input on=20
>>> the mix board and the signal to be recorded is bussed to a monitor =
>>> out? I=20
>>> don't know why this is so difficult for me to grasp -probably over =
>>> thinking=20
>>> it.... (or maybe not enough Scotch?)</FONT></DIV>
>>> <DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Thanks.</FONT></DIV>
>>> <DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>MR</FONT></DIV></BODY></HTML>
>>>
>>>
>>
>
>
Re: Would someone please explain direct monitoring? [message #89565 is a reply to message #89562] Sun, 09 September 2007 15:18 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Dedric Terry is currently offline  Dedric Terry   UNITED STATES
Messages: 788
Registered: June 2007
Senior Member
James - my comments on Symphony are simply that the reviews I've read simply
counter Lamont's claims that it is leading the audio interface market with
lower latency than anything else. 1.6ms roundtrip is great, but only if it
is reality under realistic loading - I'm all for it, and the more interfaces
running sub 2ms, or better, sub 1ms the better. No one said it's a bad
interface, or subpar than anything else, just that it isn't necessarily some
remarkable breakthrough technology.

Let's keep the facts straight and refrain from blindly defending anything
that relates to Apple (though this was specifically in response to a
poster's comments, not Apogee, Symphony, or Apple). The VSL2020 comparison
was purely to point out that low latency interfaces aren't breakthrough
technology - even RME and Lynx haven't completely reached the level of low
latency the 2020 did, regardless of I/O config.

I'm all for a great interface from Apogee, for the Mac, and for Logic. As
Jamie often states, competition is good for all. I don't want to be locked
into anything, whether it's ProTools or Nuendo, PC or Mac, RME or Apogee.

Please, yet again, don't jump to conclusions and assume that everyone is out
to trash anything remotely related to Apple, 3rd party providers, etc.
James, there is often more to my comments than you might like to believe -
it seems far too easy for you to jump on me assuming I'm somehow slandering
Apple, and it's getting really old. Give it a rest.

I have to be honest, my tolerance level for the defensiveness and lack of
technical backing for the many tech debates here is wearing quite thin. I
like you guys and generally enjoy conversing here, but I'm sure we all have
better things to do than wade through constantly flip-flopping hyperbole,
misinformation, and replies made with no intent of reading the involved
post, much less understanding the poster's point of view.

Dedric

On 9/9/07 3:14 PM, in article 46e4624b$1@linux, "James McCloskey"
<excelsm@hotmail.com> wrote:

>
> Dedric Terry <dterry@keyofd.net> wrote:
>> Lamont -
>>
>> On 9/9/07 12:57 PM, in article 46e4422b$1@linux, "LaMont" <jjdpro@gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> Mike..Direct Monitoring is very important if your running a Native based
> DAW..
>>> Right now on Nunendo.com there's a Big discusion with high-end users Like
>>> Brian T and others along with Steinberg as why they can't can't achive
> near
>>> zero talking .5ms-1.5(rountrip)(latency with the current technology-high
>>> speed dual-dual core processors.
>>>
>> That has to do with scaling on multiple processors, not the driver, or the
>> direct monitoring concept or implementation. I'll address the reasons why
>> ProTools and Paris have lower latency, but where you pay the price for it
> in
>> another reply to Mike's post.
>>
>>> We thought that by now we'd be using 64 bit everything(OS,DAW, Plugins..etc)
>>> but, most of DAW companies have not figured it out or liek Steinberg,
> have
>>> balked on a complete re-write of the ASIO /VST code. Now, today they
>>> Steinberg
>>> realizes it's behind..Way behind.
>>>
>> Lamont - you might want to scroll back through the forum a bit and read
>> where Chris Ludwig said that ASIO still runs a bit lower latency and more
>> efficiently than other drivers (Core audio comparable to WDM with Sonar,
> but
>> ASIO having lower cpu overhead for the same latency). Apogee uses Core
>> audio, and the last comment I read from a DAW builder wasn't overly
>> impressed with the Symphony solution. ASIO and VST aren't way behind
>> anything. Research a little better please.
>
> That's a bit of a blanket statement, most are not impressed because of the
> price of Synphony, not the performance.
>
>>
>>> Apple: Apple who owns Logic Audio decide 4 years ago , to forgo the current
>>> 24bit,32 bit float coding techniques of today, and start fresh with a
> fresh
>>> 64 bit OS, along with a fresh 64 bit Pro Audio/Video app with 64 bit
>>> plugins.
>>> Yes,they've(Apple) taken some PR hits in the last couple of years, but
> I
>>> think their decision to take a step back..look at the BIG picture, will
> pay
>>> dividends and put them in a new NATIVE standard,with near zero 1.6 ms
> DAW
>>> level, on their 8 & 16 core Personal computers(Macs)using the Apogee
>>> Symphony
>>> setup.
>>
>> I am almost positive Logic is still a 32-bit float audio engine, which is
>> completely independant of a 64-bit OS (memory/data handling, application
>> coding). In SOS Joe Bryan of Univ. Audio stated that there are
>> disadvantages to 64-bit audio esp. for plugins, not just a blanket more
> bits
>> are better.
>
> The disadvantage is, processing power, space, bandwidth, and the fact that
> they and their hardware are not ready for 64bit yet, just wait.
>
>>
>> Also, regarding the 1.6ms round trip, Steinberg's VSL2020 interface has/had
>> 0.7ms latency years ago, and if you can find one, it still does - that's
>> ASIO. Lynx cards are also running slightly lower latency than RME on some
>> systems (Nuendo, Cubase, etc) and can achieve 1.5ms roundtrip (probably
> less
>> than another 0.1ms for converters). With Samplitude/Sequoia, RME runs lower
>> than Lynx.
>
> The Steinberg VSL 2020 was a 32 ch. Adat card, The Symphony system is 1.7
> ms. analog to analog. With Symphony it's 192 simultaneous audio ch. at 1.7
> MS. To minimize what Symphony can do is not right.
>
>>>
>>> My heart is telling me that as far as the Native race, Apple is going
> to
>>> win out. Even with some issues with core-auio., when they go 64 bit OS
> and
>>> follwoing their APPS (Final Cut Pro, Logic Pro 8). Their strategic
>>> partnership
>>> with Apogee makes for an force to be reckoned with.
>>
>> I wouldn't jump so fast. Certainly Apple has the advantage of the whole
>> package in house, but read the above paragraphs before proclaiming
>> Apogee/Apple as the current king of low latency. The Apogee system was
> one
>> I have watched in considering a Mac at some point mainly to see if it had
>> any better performance than an RME or Lynx system, being a Core audio
>> system, but so far that doesn't seem to be bearing out in reality, just
> in
>> marketing.
>>
>> Dedric
>
> Well Dedric, since Apogee's claims are false and nothing more than marketing
> hype, maybe a lawsuit is in order.
>
>>
>>>
>>> Then again, there's always Digidesign. Who has the lion share of the Pro
>>> Auio market.
>>>
>>>
>>> Ensuring that they not only have grreat work flow, but great sound I/O..
>>>
>>> Sorry for the long response.
>>>
>>> "Mike R." <emarenot@yahoo.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Man, I'm so used to Paris that I've not really had to wrap my head around
>>>> this direct monitoring thing. I've been trying all morning to find some
>>>> sort of explanation that made sense. The RME site has some info, but
> how
>>>> the heck does a piece of software, on top of a piece of software LOWER
> the
>>>> latency (Total Mix "on top of" Cubase for example)?? Is the best way
> to
>>>> think about it to conceptualize Total Mix as functioning like an external
>>>> mix board: a pre-recorded track from Cubase is routed to an input on
> the
>>> mix
>>>> board and the signal to be recorded is bussed to a monitor out? I don't
>>>> know why this is so difficult for me to grasp -probably over thinking
> it....
>>>> (or maybe not enough Scotch?)
>>>> Thanks.
>>>> MR
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN">
>>>> <HTML><HEAD>
>>>> <META http-equiv=3DContent-Type content=3D"text/html; =
>>>> charset=3Diso-8859-1">
>>>> <META content=3D"MSHTML 6.00.2800.1555" name=3DGENERATOR>
>>>> <STYLE></STYLE>
>>>> </HEAD>
>>>> <BODY bgColor=3D#ffffff>
>>>> <DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Man, I'm so used to Paris that I've
> not
>>> =
>>>> really had=20
>>>> to wrap my head around this direct monitoring thing.  I've been =
>>>> trying all=20
>>>> morning to find some sort of explanation that made sense.  The RME =
>>>> site has=20
>>>> some info, but how the heck does a piece of software, on top of a piece
>>> =
>>>> of=20
>>>> software LOWER the latency (Total Mix "on top of" Cubase for =
>>>> example)??  Is=20
>>>> the best way to think about it to conceptualize Total Mix as functioning
>>> =
>>>> like an=20
>>>> external mix board: a pre-recorded track from Cubase is routed to an
> =
>>>> input on=20
>>>> the mix board and the signal to be recorded is bussed to a monitor =
>>>> out?  I=20
>>>> don't know why this is so difficult for me to grasp -probably over =
>>>> thinking=20
>>>> it.... (or maybe not enough Scotch?)</FONT></DIV>
>>>> <DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Thanks.</FONT></DIV>
>>>> <DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>MR</FONT></DIV></BODY></HTML>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>
>
Re: Would someone please explain direct monitoring? [message #89566 is a reply to message #89561] Sun, 09 September 2007 16:20 Go to previous messageGo to next message
LaMont is currently offline  LaMont
Messages: 828
Registered: October 2005
Senior Member
Dedric what are you talking about ??

Asio may be the best for Native PC da users, but certainly not for mac users.


All in all , with ASIO getting long winded, Asio has gotten old, and they
Steinberg has not figured out how to fix the routing(Mixer) issuses that
will put it on par with Pro Tool's software controlled hardware.

Your argument about HD plugins is valid, but Digi is throwing the kitchen
sink these days with new purchases, not just trade-ins. Suffice it to say,
when you purchase a new HD rig, you won't need to make many Plugin Purchases
anytime soon.

I totally disagre with you about Native being a Cheaper upgrade path. Since
1999, most semi and high end users have upgraded their systems at least 4
-5 times.. With the intent of gaining more power. Even today, We sterinberg
users are still on the upgrade war path with the wholo core2 dual, 8 core..yada
yada..How much do you think it cost ?? what's the real TCO??

If I'm honest, I'll tell I have spent over 6K over the last 5 years, not
counting software..And thats being kind.

With evey mention of a new Processor, comes the dream of Zero lantency for
the Native. Now, we know our pre-64 bit cpu investments over that last couple
of years has been a sham..
Sure we can run a few more plugins, but that's about it..

To me and my circle of producers and engineers, all have or will be going
Pro Tool HD.. Depending on the needs, HD 2 acell seems to be the popular
choice. Maybe your circle of music friend are going Native, not mine..and
these guys are heavey hitters in he game.

I'm not the biggest fan of Pro Tools(AkA Slo-tools), but it has the buzz
all the way down to M-powered, LE..to mix(plus).

I truly believe Native can compete with a DSP based system (for Commerical
based studios) withthe inclusion of a mixer.

It's funny, a lot of Pro Tools based studios haveimplemented a Mixer. Why??

Like the Nuendo forum discusion pointed out: It seems(like always) that we
have different needs. The ITB guys need near or closest to zero latency as
possible. Where as the guys who just edits and mix , run their daw at 1024
and care about zero latency.

I think in the future, it would best(for all) to say what application you
work in before making statements or suggestions to anyone. Because everyone
has differnt studio, workflow needs.

Dedric, you mainly work in Post, where as I work in a more commercial studio.
Our needs and opinions will be vastly different.

That's he problem with these kinds of dscusions in forums. You have a ITB,
one room dude, running abelton live( nothing wrong with that), telling dude
who works at a facility that abelton live would be good for them ..





Dedric Terry <dterry@keyofd.net> wrote:
>Lamont -
>
>On 9/9/07 12:57 PM, in article 46e4422b$1@linux, "LaMont" <jjdpro@gmail.com>
>wrote:
>
>>
>> Mike..Direct Monitoring is very important if your running a Native based
DAW..
>> Right now on Nunendo.com there's a Big discusion with high-end users Like
>> Brian T and others along with Steinberg as why they can't can't achive
near
>> zero talking .5ms-1.5(rountrip)(latency with the current technology-high
>> speed dual-dual core processors.
>>
>That has to do with scaling on multiple processors, not the driver, or the
>direct monitoring concept or implementation. I'll address the reasons why
>ProTools and Paris have lower latency, but where you pay the price for it
in
>another reply to Mike's post.
>
>> We thought that by now we'd be using 64 bit everything(OS,DAW, Plugins..etc)
>> but, most of DAW companies have not figured it out or liek Steinberg,
have
>> balked on a complete re-write of the ASIO /VST code. Now, today they Steinberg
>> realizes it's behind..Way behind.
>>
>Lamont - you might want to scroll back through the forum a bit and read
>where Chris Ludwig said that ASIO still runs a bit lower latency and more
>efficiently than other drivers (Core audio comparable to WDM with Sonar,
but
>ASIO having lower cpu overhead for the same latency). Apogee uses Core
>audio, and the last comment I read from a DAW builder wasn't overly
>impressed with the Symphony solution. ASIO and VST aren't way behind
>anything. Research a little better please.
>
>> Apple: Apple who owns Logic Audio decide 4 years ago , to forgo the current
>> 24bit,32 bit float coding techniques of today, and start fresh with a
fresh
>> 64 bit OS, along with a fresh 64 bit Pro Audio/Video app with 64 bit plugins.
>> Yes,they've(Apple) taken some PR hits in the last couple of years, but
I
>> think their decision to take a step back..look at the BIG picture, will
pay
>> dividends and put them in a new NATIVE standard,with near zero 1.6 ms
DAW
>> level, on their 8 & 16 core Personal computers(Macs)using the Apogee Symphony
>> setup.
>
>I am almost positive Logic is still a 32-bit float audio engine, which is
>completely independant of a 64-bit OS (memory/data handling, application
>coding). In SOS Joe Bryan of Univ. Audio stated that there are
>disadvantages to 64-bit audio esp. for plugins, not just a blanket more
bits
>are better.
>
>Also, regarding the 1.6ms round trip, Steinberg's VSL2020 interface has/had
>0.7ms latency years ago, and if you can find one, it still does - that's
>ASIO. Lynx cards are also running slightly lower latency than RME on some
>systems (Nuendo, Cubase, etc) and can achieve 1.5ms roundtrip (probably
less
>than another 0.1ms for converters). With Samplitude/Sequoia, RME runs lower
>than Lynx.
>>
>> My heart is telling me that as far as the Native race, Apple is going
to
>> win out. Even with some issues with core-auio., when they go 64 bit OS
and
>> follwoing their APPS (Final Cut Pro, Logic Pro 8). Their strategic partnership
>> with Apogee makes for an force to be reckoned with.
>
>I wouldn't jump so fast. Certainly Apple has the advantage of the whole
>package in house, but read the above paragraphs before proclaiming
>Apogee/Apple as the current king of low latency. The Apogee system was
one
>I have watched in considering a Mac at some point mainly to see if it had
>any better performance than an RME or Lynx system, being a Core audio
>system, but so far that doesn't seem to be bearing out in reality, just
in
>marketing.
>
>Dedric
>
>>
>> Then again, there's always Digidesign. Who has the lion share of the Pro
>> Auio market.
>>
>>
>> Ensuring that they not only have grreat work flow, but great sound I/O..
>>
>> Sorry for the long response.
>>
>> "Mike R." <emarenot@yahoo.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>> Man, I'm so used to Paris that I've not really had to wrap my head around
>>> this direct monitoring thing. I've been trying all morning to find some
>>> sort of explanation that made sense. The RME site has some info, but
how
>>> the heck does a piece of software, on top of a piece of software LOWER
the
>>> latency (Total Mix "on top of" Cubase for example)?? Is the best way
to
>>> think about it to conceptualize Total Mix as functioning like an external
>>> mix board: a pre-recorded track from Cubase is routed to an input on
the
>> mix
>>> board and the signal to be recorded is bussed to a monitor out? I don't
>>> know why this is so difficult for me to grasp -probably over thinking
it....
>>> (or maybe not enough Scotch?)
>>> Thanks.
>>> MR
>>>
>>>
>>> <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN">
>>> <HTML><HEAD>
>>> <META http-equiv=3DContent-Type content=3D"text/html; =
>>> charset=3Diso-8859-1">
>>> <META content=3D"MSHTML 6.00.2800.1555" name=3DGENERATOR>
>>> <STYLE></STYLE>
>>> </HEAD>
>>> <BODY bgColor=3D#ffffff>
>>> <DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Man, I'm so used to Paris that I've
not
>> =
>>> really had=20
>>> to wrap my head around this direct monitoring thing.  I've been =
>>> trying all=20
>>> morning to find some sort of explanation that made sense.  The RME =
>>> site has=20
>>> some info, but how the heck does a piece of software, on top of a piece
>> =
>>> of=20
>>> software LOWER the latency (Total Mix "on top of" Cubase for =
>>> example)??  Is=20
>>> the best way to think about it to conceptualize Total Mix as functioning
>> =
>>> like an=20
>>> external mix board: a pre-recorded track from Cubase is routed to an
=
>>> input on=20
>>> the mix board and the signal to be recorded is bussed to a monitor =
>>> out?  I=20
>>> don't know why this is so difficult for me to grasp -probably over =
>>> thinking=20
>>> it.... (or maybe not enough Scotch?)</FONT></DIV>
>>> <DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Thanks.</FONT></DIV>
>>> <DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>MR</FONT></DIV></BODY></HTML>
>>>
>>>
>>
>
Re: Would someone please explain direct monitoring? [message #89569 is a reply to message #89566] Sun, 09 September 2007 16:56 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Dedric Terry is currently offline  Dedric Terry   UNITED STATES
Messages: 788
Registered: June 2007
Senior Member
On 9/9/07 5:20 PM, in article 46e47fcf$1@linux, "LaMont"
<jjdpro@ameritech.net> wrote:

>
> Dedric what are you talking about ??
>
> Asio may be the best for Native PC da users, but certainly not for mac users.
>
You never separated ASIO/PC from ASIO/Mac - your comments were about latency
in general. It is important to be technically accurate when making claims
about one platform or gear being better than others.
>
> All in all , with ASIO getting long winded, Asio has gotten old, and they
> Steinberg has not figured out how to fix the routing(Mixer) issuses that
> will put it on par with Pro Tool's software controlled hardware.
>
Where did you hear that ASIO was getting long winded? What do you base this
opinion on? I've already explained the difference between native and
hybrid-hardware. There is a full 3rd party operating system between native
and the hardware. With hybrid, there is only a bit of assembler code and
logic circuitry. Two different animals. Latency comparisons come about as
a matter of implementation and function, not direct technical similarities.

> Your argument about HD plugins is valid, but Digi is throwing the kitchen
> sink these days with new purchases, not just trade-ins. Suffice it to say,
> when you purchase a new HD rig, you won't need to make many Plugin Purchases
> anytime soon.

No doubt they see the native writing on the wall or they wouldn't have
bought M-Audio to actually support - they would have bought Steinberg and
promptly burned the development files and blown out any remaining stock.
>
> I totally disagre with you about Native being a Cheaper upgrade path. Since
> 1999, most semi and high end users have upgraded their systems at least 4
> -5 times.. With the intent of gaining more power. Even today, We sterinberg
> users are still on the upgrade war path with the wholo core2 dual, 8
> core..yada
> yada..How much do you think it cost ?? what's the real TCO??

You might be on the upgrade war path, but there is no war here - only
gaining more and more power for my investment with minimal annual cost.
Since 1999 how many PT users upgraded from Mix to HD? The cost there is
thousands, not hundreds - for many it was well over $10k, $20k or $50k.
>
> If I'm honest, I'll tell I have spent over 6K over the last 5 years, not
> counting software..And thats being kind.

But you don't get Digi products free do you? They also cost. You have to
buy conversion apps, encoders separately, plugins at double the native cost.
That adds up at a much faster rate. With a PT rig, you still have to buy a
Mac or PC, Cubase/Nuendo/Logic, etc to run a decent sequencer and VSTi's,
where my system is completely integrated and cross-compatible. I could add
a Mac, or 3 or 4 and still be cross-compatible, completely linked and
synced, and upgrade for a few hundred whenever the mood strikes.

>
> With evey mention of a new Processor, comes the dream of Zero lantency for
> the Native. Now, we know our pre-64 bit cpu investments over that last couple
> of years has been a sham..
> Sure we can run a few more plugins, but that's about it..

You are superimposing your own somewhat extreme reaction and frustration on
every other native user, and/or reading a few posts and assuming a handful
of computer-compulsive users represent the DAW world. That's about as far
from the truth as you could be, Lamont.
>
> To me and my circle of producers and engineers, all have or will be going
> Pro Tool HD.. Depending on the needs, HD 2 acell seems to be the popular
> choice. Maybe your circle of music friend are going Native, not mine..and
> these guys are heavey hitters in he game.

You are assuming my circle is somehow lowly, inferior light weights. Sorry,
but your are generalizing, making erroneous assumptions and apparently think
quite highly of your own view of success. Good for you. There is a good
bit of complete ignorant crap coming from "heavy hitters" these days, so be
careful how you support your views.

> Like the Nuendo forum discusion pointed out: It seems(like always) that we
> have different needs. The ITB guys need near or closest to zero latency as
> possible. Where as the guys who just edits and mix , run their daw at 1024
> and care about zero latency.

For one, it is short-sighted to simply segregate native DAW users from
Protools users as if there is a superior need within the Protools market.
The needs are based on studio function and preference, not superiority.
Many recording studios with plenty of high end gear put out crappy
productions, whereas a composer or producer with less gear can easily be
working on a much higher quality level, with a much higher level of
expertise (for example Steve Tushar producing sound design for Disney films,
etc, all from his basement with Nuendo and an MC; or Hans Zimmer making $50
million a year scoring films, with a large staff, and racks of computer
systems - the PT rig for tracking, but not production). I know the points
at which one chooses one solution over another.
>
> I think in the future, it would best(for all) to say what application you
> work in before making statements or suggestions to anyone. Because everyone
> has differnt studio, workflow needs.

Yes, and to research your comments before reciting marketing or user hype.
Not all users with a recording studio gig are well versed in the technical
realities of the gear and the market we are in. Let's also include the day
gig as well to know who does this daily and who does it in off hours.
>
> Dedric, you mainly work in Post, where as I work in a more commercial studio.
> Our needs and opinions will be vastly different.

Lamont, let's be clear, my studio is commercial - I work daily with high
paying clients. I just don't hire it out for use by others for recording
whatever band wants to come by. My clientele is easily as demanding and
high end, and perhaps moreso than larger commercial studios recording bands
and artists. Different horses for different courses. The large format
studio is a dying breed, so I'm not sure I would tout that as the elite of
the creative arts industry at the moment.
>
> That's he problem with these kinds of dscusions in forums. You have a ITB,
> one room dude, running abelton live( nothing wrong with that), telling dude
> who works at a facility that abelton live would be good for them ..
>
Are you referring to anyone in particular, or is that a generalization? If
the latter, it doesn't really apply here. Recommendations here are always
valid as you don't always know what is best for the original poster.

Dedric
>
>
>
Re: Would someone please explain direct monitoring? [message #89571 is a reply to message #89569] Sun, 09 September 2007 17:59 Go to previous messageGo to next message
LaMont is currently offline  LaMont
Messages: 828
Registered: October 2005
Senior Member
Dedric, you work in a post enviroemnt ..Not a fulltime tracking facilty.

Second, Totally differnt. But, the very high end in your genre have Fairlights,
light the facilty here in metro detroit (Grace & Wilds)..

Look, I can and have made very good records on VS-880s and Vs1680.. Does
not mean that those devices and my (at the time) un-finished basement) was
professional.

Your needs and my needs are vastly different> I really need at least 32 channels
of I/O for tracking..

To me and many others Asio long in the tooth. It's funny how you don;t state
how many users have left Neundo, an went to Pro Tools..Just to be fair, as
many have come over to Steinberg, many have went over to Digi.

lastly, I don't recite markeing hype, I acually use Logic(7.2), Nuendo 3.2,
Pro Tools (HD, M-Powered, LE7.3) Paris 3.0 Cubase 3,and just last week mixed
a project on Sonar 6.. You on the onther hand , just read up on said products.


I'm in the trenches with those DAWS. I know what's their strenghts and weakness's
are.

Do you know that 50 percent Protools facilities are still on Mix-Plus rigs??
That's he real reason Digi is making these deals..Has absolutly nothing to
do with Native..

They purchased M-audio for 2 reasons..To get a strangle hold of the Low-End
market. And, to get a team of killer driver makers for the PC (Windows) platform..

Truth is , there are more Nuendo "crack" users than legit users. I don;t
knwo how Steingberg is making any money. Cubase yes, but Nuendo..No..

I guess we are back to our usuall disagreement about wha's considered Pro.
That's fine, you can call pro anything you like..I'll refrain form such terms..But,
I will use terms as Comercial and Project..even pro project studios. To me,
jsut because a person has his PC/Mac in a office building does not make him
comerical. There are certain indusry tools you must have to be considered
commerical. Even you have high-end clients.


Dedric Terry <dterry@keyofd.net> wrote:
>On 9/9/07 5:20 PM, in article 46e47fcf$1@linux, "LaMont"
><jjdpro@ameritech.net> wrote:
>
>>
>> Dedric what are you talking about ??
>>
>> Asio may be the best for Native PC da users, but certainly not for mac
users.
>>
>You never separated ASIO/PC from ASIO/Mac - your comments were about latency
>in general. It is important to be technically accurate when making claims
>about one platform or gear being better than others.
>>
>> All in all , with ASIO getting long winded, Asio has gotten old, and they
>> Steinberg has not figured out how to fix the routing(Mixer) issuses that
>> will put it on par with Pro Tool's software controlled hardware.
>>
>Where did you hear that ASIO was getting long winded? What do you base
this
>opinion on? I've already explained the difference between native and
>hybrid-hardware. There is a full 3rd party operating system between native
>and the hardware. With hybrid, there is only a bit of assembler code and
>logic circuitry. Two different animals. Latency comparisons come about
as
>a matter of implementation and function, not direct technical similarities.
>
>> Your argument about HD plugins is valid, but Digi is throwing the kitchen
>> sink these days with new purchases, not just trade-ins. Suffice it to
say,
>> when you purchase a new HD rig, you won't need to make many Plugin Purchases
>> anytime soon.
>
>No doubt they see the native writing on the wall or they wouldn't have
>bought M-Audio to actually support - they would have bought Steinberg and
>promptly burned the development files and blown out any remaining stock.
>>
>> I totally disagre with you about Native being a Cheaper upgrade path.
Since
>> 1999, most semi and high end users have upgraded their systems at least
4
>> -5 times.. With the intent of gaining more power. Even today, We sterinberg
>> users are still on the upgrade war path with the wholo core2 dual, 8
>> core..yada
>> yada..How much do you think it cost ?? what's the real TCO??
>
>You might be on the upgrade war path, but there is no war here - only
>gaining more and more power for my investment with minimal annual cost.
>Since 1999 how many PT users upgraded from Mix to HD? The cost there is
>thousands, not hundreds - for many it was well over $10k, $20k or $50k.
>>
>> If I'm honest, I'll tell I have spent over 6K over the last 5 years, not
>> counting software..And thats being kind.
>
>But you don't get Digi products free do you? They also cost. You have
to
>buy conversion apps, encoders separately, plugins at double the native cost.
>That adds up at a much faster rate. With a PT rig, you still have to buy
a
>Mac or PC, Cubase/Nuendo/Logic, etc to run a decent sequencer and VSTi's,
>where my system is completely integrated and cross-compatible. I could
add
>a Mac, or 3 or 4 and still be cross-compatible, completely linked and
>synced, and upgrade for a few hundred whenever the mood strikes.
>
>>
>> With evey mention of a new Processor, comes the dream of Zero lantency
for
>> the Native. Now, we know our pre-64 bit cpu investments over that last
couple
>> of years has been a sham..
>> Sure we can run a few more plugins, but that's about it..
>
>You are superimposing your own somewhat extreme reaction and frustration
on
>every other native user, and/or reading a few posts and assuming a handful
>of computer-compulsive users represent the DAW world. That's about as far
>from the truth as you could be, Lamont.
>>
>> To me and my circle of producers and engineers, all have or will be going
>> Pro Tool HD.. Depending on the needs, HD 2 acell seems to be the popular
>> choice. Maybe your circle of music friend are going Native, not mine..and
>> these guys are heavey hitters in he game.
>
>You are assuming my circle is somehow lowly, inferior light weights. Sorry,
>but your are generalizing, making erroneous assumptions and apparently think
>quite highly of your own view of success. Good for you. There is a good
>bit of complete ignorant crap coming from "heavy hitters" these days, so
be
>careful how you support your views.
>
>> Like the Nuendo forum discusion pointed out: It seems(like always) that
we
>> have different needs. The ITB guys need near or closest to zero latency
as
>> possible. Where as the guys who just edits and mix , run their daw at
1024
>> and care about zero latency.
>
>For one, it is short-sighted to simply segregate native DAW users from
>Protools users as if there is a superior need within the Protools market.
>The needs are based on studio function and preference, not superiority.
>Many recording studios with plenty of high end gear put out crappy
>productions, whereas a composer or producer with less gear can easily be
>working on a much higher quality level, with a much higher level of
>expertise (for example Steve Tushar producing sound design for Disney films,
>etc, all from his basement with Nuendo and an MC; or Hans Zimmer making
$50
>million a year scoring films, with a large staff, and racks of computer
>systems - the PT rig for tracking, but not production). I know the points
>at which one chooses one solution over another.
>>
>> I think in the future, it would best(for all) to say what application
you
>> work in before making statements or suggestions to anyone. Because everyone
>> has differnt studio, workflow needs.
>
>Yes, and to research your comments before reciting marketing or user hype.
>Not all users with a recording studio gig are well versed in the technical
>realities of the gear and the market we are in. Let's also include the
day
>gig as well to know who does this daily and who does it in off hours.
>>
>> Dedric, you mainly work in Post, where as I work in a more commercial
studio.
>> Our needs and opinions will be vastly different.
>
>Lamont, let's be clear, my studio is commercial - I work daily with high
>paying clients. I just don't hire it out for use by others for recording
>whatever band wants to come by. My clientele is easily as demanding and
>high end, and perhaps moreso than larger commercial studios recording bands
>and artists. Different horses for different courses. The large format
>studio is a dying breed, so I'm not sure I would tout that as the elite
of
>the creative arts industry at the moment.
>>
>> That's he problem with these kinds of dscusions in forums. You have a
ITB,
>> one room dude, running abelton live( nothing wrong with that), telling
dude
>> who works at a facility that abelton live would be good for them ..
>>
>Are you referring to anyone in particular, or is that a generalization?
If
>the latter, it doesn't really apply here. Recommendations here are always
>valid as you don't always know what is best for the original poster.
>
>Dedric
>>
>>
>>
>
Re: Would someone please explain direct monitoring? [message #89572 is a reply to message #89569] Sun, 09 September 2007 19:16 Go to previous messageGo to next message
LaMont is currently offline  LaMont
Messages: 828
Registered: October 2005
Senior Member
Cont..
You stated:Many recording studios with plenty of high end gear put out crappy
productions"

Of course anybody with some money can go into wold-calss facilty say Ocean
Way http://www.oceanwaystudios.com/ . Does not guarantee a great recording.
But, that does not deminish the fact that the Facilty is world class.

So, your point is not valid. As well as always, regurgitating tech list
that listed on a products web site or reciting what somone is said that's
linked to the company as Gospel. Those comapany types lie all the time and
mis-state facts and details about thier producs. So, you giving your so-called
"facts" based on a product media sheet, is weak ..

How about actually taking the product for spin for awhile, then report back.



Dedric Terry <dterry@keyofd.net> wrote:
>On 9/9/07 5:20 PM, in article 46e47fcf$1@linux, "LaMont"
><jjdpro@ameritech.net> wrote:
>
>>
>> Dedric what are you talking about ??
>>
>> Asio may be the best for Native PC da users, but certainly not for mac
users.
>>
>You never separated ASIO/PC from ASIO/Mac - your comments were about latency
>in general. It is important to be technically accurate when making claims
>about one platform or gear being better than others.
>>
>> All in all , with ASIO getting long winded, Asio has gotten old, and they
>> Steinberg has not figured out how to fix the routing(Mixer) issuses that
>> will put it on par with Pro Tool's software controlled hardware.
>>
>Where did you hear that ASIO was getting long winded? What do you base
this
>opinion on? I've already explained the difference between native and
>hybrid-hardware. There is a full 3rd party operating system between native
>and the hardware. With hybrid, there is only a bit of assembler code and
>logic circuitry. Two different animals. Latency comparisons come about
as
>a matter of implementation and function, not direct technical similarities.
>
>> Your argument about HD plugins is valid, but Digi is throwing the kitchen
>> sink these days with new purchases, not just trade-ins. Suffice it to
say,
>> when you purchase a new HD rig, you won't need to make many Plugin Purchases
>> anytime soon.
>
>No doubt they see the native writing on the wall or they wouldn't have
>bought M-Audio to actually support - they would have bought Steinberg and
>promptly burned the development files and blown out any remaining stock.
>>
>> I totally disagre with you about Native being a Cheaper upgrade path.
Since
>> 1999, most semi and high end users have upgraded their systems at least
4
>> -5 times.. With the intent of gaining more power. Even today, We sterinberg
>> users are still on the upgrade war path with the wholo core2 dual, 8
>> core..yada
>> yada..How much do you think it cost ?? what's the real TCO??
>
>You might be on the upgrade war path, but there is no war here - only
>gaining more and more power for my investment with minimal annual cost.
>Since 1999 how many PT users upgraded from Mix to HD? The cost there is
>thousands, not hundreds - for many it was well over $10k, $20k or $50k.
>>
>> If I'm honest, I'll tell I have spent over 6K over the last 5 years, not
>> counting software..And thats being kind.
>
>But you don't get Digi products free do you? They also cost. You have
to
>buy conversion apps, encoders separately, plugins at double the native cost.
>That adds up at a much faster rate. With a PT rig, you still have to buy
a
>Mac or PC, Cubase/Nuendo/Logic, etc to run a decent sequencer and VSTi's,
>where my system is completely integrated and cross-compatible. I could
add
>a Mac, or 3 or 4 and still be cross-compatible, completely linked and
>synced, and upgrade for a few hundred whenever the mood strikes.
>
>>
>> With evey mention of a new Processor, comes the dream of Zero lantency
for
>> the Native. Now, we know our pre-64 bit cpu investments over that last
couple
>> of years has been a sham..
>> Sure we can run a few more plugins, but that's about it..
>
>You are superimposing your own somewhat extreme reaction and frustration
on
>every other native user, and/or reading a few posts and assuming a handful
>of computer-compulsive users represent the DAW world. That's about as far
>from the truth as you could be, Lamont.
>>
>> To me and my circle of producers and engineers, all have or will be going
>> Pro Tool HD.. Depending on the needs, HD 2 acell seems to be the popular
>> choice. Maybe your circle of music friend are going Native, not mine..and
>> these guys are heavey hitters in he game.
>
>You are assuming my circle is somehow lowly, inferior light weights. Sorry,
>but your are generalizing, making erroneous assumptions and apparently think
>quite highly of your own view of success. Good for you. There is a good
>bit of complete ignorant crap coming from "heavy hitters" these days, so
be
>careful how you support your views.
>
>> Like the Nuendo forum discusion pointed out: It seems(like always) that
we
>> have different needs. The ITB guys need near or closest to zero latency
as
>> possible. Where as the guys who just edits and mix , run their daw at
1024
>> and care about zero latency.
>
>For one, it is short-sighted to simply segregate native DAW users from
>Protools users as if there is a superior need within the Protools market.
>The needs are based on studio function and preference, not superiority.
>Many recording studios with plenty of high end gear put out crappy
>productions, whereas a composer or producer with less gear can easily be
>working on a much higher quality level, with a much higher level of
>expertise (for example Steve Tushar producing sound design for Disney films,
>etc, all from his basement with Nuendo and an MC; or Hans Zimmer making
$50
>million a year scoring films, with a large staff, and racks of computer
>systems - the PT rig for tracking, but not production). I know the points
>at which one chooses one solution over another.
>>
>> I think in the future, it would best(for all) to say what application
you
>> work in before making statements or suggestions to anyone. Because everyone
>> has differnt studio, workflow needs.
>
>Yes, and to research your comments before reciting marketing or user hype.
>Not all users with a recording studio gig are well versed in the technical
>realities of the gear and the market we are in. Let's also include the
day
>gig as well to know who does this daily and who does it in off hours.
>>
>> Dedric, you mainly work in Post, where as I work in a more commercial
studio.
>> Our needs and opinions will be vastly different.
>
>Lamont, let's be clear, my studio is commercial - I work daily with high
>paying clients. I just don't hire it out for use by others for recording
>whatever band wants to come by. My clientele is easily as demanding and
>high end, and perhaps moreso than larger commercial studios recording bands
>and artists. Different horses for different courses. The large format
>studio is a dying breed, so I'm not sure I would tout that as the elite
of
>the creative arts industry at the moment.
>>
>> That's he problem with these kinds of dscusions in forums. You have a
ITB,
>> one room dude, running abelton live( nothing wrong with that), telling
dude
>> who works at a facility that abelton live would be good for them ..
>>
>Are you referring to anyone in particular, or is that a generalization?
If
>the latter, it doesn't really apply here. Recommendations here are always
>valid as you don't always know what is best for the original poster.
>
>Dedric
>>
>>
>>
>
Re: Would someone please explain direct monitoring? [message #89573 is a reply to message #89572] Sun, 09 September 2007 20:15 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Nei is currently offline  Nei
Messages: 108
Registered: November 2006
Senior Member
Lamont...

That which is "pro" and what's not "pro" by your definition
matters to maybe 5% of the population of studio dawgs - the
ones that are dealing with the A-list labels, artists &
producers. And yeah, for those facilities, you'd better have an
HD rig, not ot mention a nice collection of veentaje mics,
preamps, guitars, and instrument amps. Oh, and you'd better
have a nice well-tuned grand piano, as well - even though it
might actually only get used once or twice a year. Add to that
5% perhaps another maybe 5% of artists who have some well-
moneyed backing that THINK they need a certain brand of gear or
type of facility, and that's your "pro" market in terms of
commercial studios.

That which "works" & makes sense is what matters to the
remaining 90%.

Considering the rate at which world-class facilities have been
closing down over the past few years, I think it's safe to say
that more & more "pro" recordings are going to be made in "not-
so-pro" facilities as time goes by.

Just something to think about before you go too far in equating
level of end-quality with some fancy starship of a studio.

Neil


"LaMont" <jjdpro@ameritech.net> wrote:
>
>Cont..
>You stated:Many recording studios with plenty of high end gear put out crappy
>productions"
>
>Of course anybody with some money can go into wold-calss facilty say Ocean
>Way http://www.oceanwaystudios.com/ . Does not guarantee a great recording.
>But, that does not deminish the fact that the Facilty is world class.
>
>So, your point is not valid. As well as always, regurgitating tech list
>that listed on a products web site or reciting what somone is said that's
>linked to the company as Gospel. Those comapany types lie all the time and
>mis-state facts and details about thier producs. So, you giving your so-called
>"facts" based on a product media sheet, is weak ..
>
>How about actually taking the product for spin for awhile, then report back.
>
>
>
>Dedric Terry <dterry@keyofd.net> wrote:
>>On 9/9/07 5:20 PM, in article 46e47fcf$1@linux, "LaMont"
>><jjdpro@ameritech.net> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> Dedric what are you talking about ??
>>>
>>> Asio may be the best for Native PC da users, but certainly not for mac
>users.
>>>
>>You never separated ASIO/PC from ASIO/Mac - your comments were about latency
>>in general. It is important to be technically accurate when making claims
>>about one platform or gear being better than others.
>>>
>>> All in all , with ASIO getting long winded, Asio has gotten old, and
they
>>> Steinberg has not figured out how to fix the routing(Mixer) issuses that
>>> will put it on par with Pro Tool's software controlled hardware.
>>>
>>Where did you hear that ASIO was getting long winded? What do you base
>this
>>opinion on? I've already explained the difference between native and
>>hybrid-hardware. There is a full 3rd party operating system between native
>>and the hardware. With hybrid, there is only a bit of assembler code and
>>logic circuitry. Two different animals. Latency comparisons come about
>as
>>a matter of implementation and function, not direct technical similarities.
>>
>>> Your argument about HD plugins is valid, but Digi is throwing the kitchen
>>> sink these days with new purchases, not just trade-ins. Suffice it to
>say,
>>> when you purchase a new HD rig, you won't need to make many Plugin Purchases
>>> anytime soon.
>>
>>No doubt they see the native writing on the wall or they wouldn't have
>>bought M-Audio to actually support - they would have bought Steinberg and
>>promptly burned the development files and blown out any remaining stock.
>>>
>>> I totally disagre with you about Native being a Cheaper upgrade path.
>Since
>>> 1999, most semi and high end users have upgraded their systems at least
>4
>>> -5 times.. With the intent of gaining more power. Even today, We sterinberg
>>> users are still on the upgrade war path with the wholo core2 dual, 8
>>> core..yada
>>> yada..How much do you think it cost ?? what's the real TCO??
>>
>>You might be on the upgrade war path, but there is no war here - only
>>gaining more and more power for my investment with minimal annual cost.
>>Since 1999 how many PT users upgraded from Mix to HD? The cost there is
>>thousands, not hundreds - for many it was well over $10k, $20k or $50k.
>>>
>>> If I'm honest, I'll tell I have spent over 6K over the last 5 years,
not
>>> counting software..And thats being kind.
>>
>>But you don't get Digi products free do you? They also cost. You have
>to
>>buy conversion apps, encoders separately, plugins at double the native
cost.
>>That adds up at a much faster rate. With a PT rig, you still have to buy
>a
>>Mac or PC, Cubase/Nuendo/Logic, etc to run a decent sequencer and VSTi's,
>>where my system is completely integrated and cross-compatible. I could
>add
>>a Mac, or 3 or 4 and still be cross-compatible, completely linked and
>>synced, and upgrade for a few hundred whenever the mood strikes.
>>
>>>
>>> With evey mention of a new Processor, comes the dream of Zero lantency
>for
>>> the Native. Now, we know our pre-64 bit cpu investments over that last
>couple
>>> of years has been a sham..
>>> Sure we can run a few more plugins, but that's about it..
>>
>>You are superimposing your own somewhat extreme reaction and frustration
>on
>>every other native user, and/or reading a few posts and assuming a handful
>>of computer-compulsive users represent the DAW world. That's about as
far
>>from the truth as you could be, Lamont.
>>>
>>> To me and my circle of producers and engineers, all have or will be going
>>> Pro Tool HD.. Depending on the needs, HD 2 acell seems to be the popular
>>> choice. Maybe your circle of music friend are going Native, not mine..and
>>> these guys are heavey hitters in he game.
>>
>>You are assuming my circle is somehow lowly, inferior light weights. Sorry,
>>but your are generalizing, making erroneous assumptions and apparently
think
>>quite highly of your own view of success. Good for you. There is a good
>>bit of complete ignorant crap coming from "heavy hitters" these days, so
>be
>>careful how you support your views.
>>
>>> Like the Nuendo forum discusion pointed out: It seems(like always) that
>we
>>> have different needs. The ITB guys need near or closest to zero latency
>as
>>> possible. Where as the guys who just edits and mix , run their daw at
>1024
>>> and care about zero latency.
>>
>>For one, it is short-sighted to simply segregate native DAW users from
>>Protools users as if there is a superior need within the Protools market.
>>The needs are based on studio function and preference, not superiority.
>>Many recording studios with plenty of high end gear put out crappy
>>productions, whereas a composer or producer with less gear can easily be
>>working on a much higher quality level, with a much higher level of
>>expertise (for example Steve Tushar producing sound design for Disney films,
>>etc, all from his basement with Nuendo and an MC; or Hans Zimmer making
>$50
>>million a year scoring films, with a large staff, and racks of computer
>>systems - the PT rig for tracking, but not production). I know the points
>>at which one chooses one solution over another.
>>>
>>> I think in the future, it would best(for all) to say what application
>you
>>> work in before making statements or suggestions to anyone. Because everyone
>>> has differnt studio, workflow needs.
>>
>>Yes, and to research your comments before reciting marketing or user hype.
>>Not all users with a recording studio gig are well versed in the technical
>>realities of the gear and the market we are in. Let's also include the
>day
>>gig as well to know who does this daily and who does it in off hours.
>>>
>>> Dedric, you mainly work in Post, where as I work in a more commercial
>studio.
>>> Our needs and opinions will be vastly different.
>>
>>Lamont, let's be clear, my studio is commercial - I work daily with high
>>paying clients. I just don't hire it out for use by others for recording
>>whatever band wants to come by. My clientele is easily as demanding and
>>high end, and perhaps moreso than larger commercial studios recording bands
>>and artists. Different horses for different courses. The large format
>>studio is a dying breed, so I'm not sure I would tout that as the elite
>of
>>the creative arts industry at the moment.
>>>
>>> That's he problem with these kinds of dscusions in forums. You have a
>ITB,
>>> one room dude, running abelton live( nothing wrong with that), telling
>dude
>>> who works at a facility that abelton live would be good for them ..
>>>
>>Are you referring to anyone in particular, or is that a generalization?
> If
>>the latter, it doesn't really apply here. Recommendations here are always
>>valid as you don't always know what is best for the original poster.
>>
>>Dedric
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>
Re: Would someone please explain direct monitoring? [message #89574 is a reply to message #89558] Sun, 09 September 2007 20:45 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Neil is currently offline  Neil
Messages: 1645
Registered: April 2006
Senior Member
Bill L <bill@billlorentzen.com> wrote:
>Mike, if you're drinking Scotch at 3:00 in the afternoon, figuring out
>direct monitoring is not your real problem.

Yes, in that case his real problem is that he obviously had a
really, really long and arduous session that went nonstop from
about noon on Saturday 'til about 2:30pm on Sunday, with a band
consisting of a Johnny Rotten wannabee on lead vocals, a bass
player with a Sears bass from the 1960's that has a pine neck
with no truss rod, a drummer whose heads are half duct
tape/half actual head material and he wants that "Phil Collins
drum sound, man!", and a guitarist that's convinced he can use
his Segovia technique through a Mesa triple rectifier set
to "nuke", and his PRS with P90's tuned two steps down & strung
with .008's; and when it's finally all over Mike discovers he's
only got a couple of snorts of Scotch left to begin with, and
the liquor stores are all closed on Sunday.

Now THAT's a problem! lol

:D

Neil
Re: Would someone please explain direct monitoring? [message #89575 is a reply to message #89573] Sun, 09 September 2007 21:30 Go to previous messageGo to next message
LaMontt  is currently offline  LaMontt   
Messages: 424
Registered: January 2007
Senior Member

Okay..But, but my point was to answer the statement about crappy music being
made in so called pro facilities. crappy clients coming in with crappy music
can happen at level of studio.

Big buck facility,does not ensure top quality product.

Okay now, on to your points. There is a strange shift occuring these days.
The emergence of the Professional Project Studio. That's usually equipped
with a DAW setup(Motu, Digi,Stieny, Logic, Sonar)and some vintage gear.

Again, each of our circles our differnt. Here in Detroit, Pro Tools is king..But,
in Nashville, Pro Tools is leading, with Nuendo second..

Clients come in asking for Pro Tools. Most of the time, they come with their
sessions already completed in Pro Tools, So, all I have to do is mix it.


Since I prefer Nuendo's workflow, I track, edit in Neundo..Consolidate. Import
to ProTools Mix and only Mix :)No editing what so ever Or I'll Mix in Paris
(If the client is not around)..

"Neil" <OIUOI@OIU.com> wrote:
>
>Lamont...
>
>That which is "pro" and what's not "pro" by your definition
>matters to maybe 5% of the population of studio dawgs - the
>ones that are dealing with the A-list labels, artists &
>producers. And yeah, for those facilities, you'd better have an
>HD rig, not ot mention a nice collection of veentaje mics,
>preamps, guitars, and instrument amps. Oh, and you'd better
>have a nice well-tuned grand piano, as well - even though it
>might actually only get used once or twice a year. Add to that
>5% perhaps another maybe 5% of artists who have some well-
>moneyed backing that THINK they need a certain brand of gear or
>type of facility, and that's your "pro" market in terms of
>commercial studios.
>
>That which "works" & makes sense is what matters to the
>remaining 90%.
>
>Considering the rate at which world-class facilities have been
>closing down over the past few years, I think it's safe to say
>that more & more "pro" recordings are going to be made in "not-
>so-pro" facilities as time goes by.
>
>Just something to think about before you go too far in equating
>level of end-quality with some fancy starship of a studio.
>
>Neil
>
>
>"LaMont" <jjdpro@ameritech.net> wrote:
>>
>>Cont..
>>You stated:Many recording studios with plenty of high end gear put out
crappy
>>productions"
>>
>>Of course anybody with some money can go into wold-calss facilty say Ocean
>>Way http://www.oceanwaystudios.com/ . Does not guarantee a great recording.
>>But, that does not deminish the fact that the Facilty is world class.
>>
>>So, your point is not valid. As well as always, regurgitating tech list
>>that listed on a products web site or reciting what somone is said that's
>>linked to the company as Gospel. Those comapany types lie all the time
and
>>mis-state facts and details about thier producs. So, you giving your so-called
>>"facts" based on a product media sheet, is weak ..
>>
>>How about actually taking the product for spin for awhile, then report
back.
>>
>>
>>
>>Dedric Terry <dterry@keyofd.net> wrote:
>>>On 9/9/07 5:20 PM, in article 46e47fcf$1@linux, "LaMont"
>>><jjdpro@ameritech.net> wrote:
>>>
>>>>
>>>> Dedric what are you talking about ??
>>>>
>>>> Asio may be the best for Native PC da users, but certainly not for mac
>>users.
>>>>
>>>You never separated ASIO/PC from ASIO/Mac - your comments were about latency
>>>in general. It is important to be technically accurate when making claims
>>>about one platform or gear being better than others.
>>>>
>>>> All in all , with ASIO getting long winded, Asio has gotten old, and
>they
>>>> Steinberg has not figured out how to fix the routing(Mixer) issuses
that
>>>> will put it on par with Pro Tool's software controlled hardware.
>>>>
>>>Where did you hear that ASIO was getting long winded? What do you base
>>this
>>>opinion on? I've already explained the difference between native and
>>>hybrid-hardware. There is a full 3rd party operating system between native
>>>and the hardware. With hybrid, there is only a bit of assembler code
and
>>>logic circuitry. Two different animals. Latency comparisons come about
>>as
>>>a matter of implementation and function, not direct technical similarities.
>>>
>>>> Your argument about HD plugins is valid, but Digi is throwing the kitchen
>>>> sink these days with new purchases, not just trade-ins. Suffice it to
>>say,
>>>> when you purchase a new HD rig, you won't need to make many Plugin Purchases
>>>> anytime soon.
>>>
>>>No doubt they see the native writing on the wall or they wouldn't have
>>>bought M-Audio to actually support - they would have bought Steinberg
and
>>>promptly burned the development files and blown out any remaining stock.
>>>>
>>>> I totally disagre with you about Native being a Cheaper upgrade path.
>>Since
>>>> 1999, most semi and high end users have upgraded their systems at least
>>4
>>>> -5 times.. With the intent of gaining more power. Even today, We sterinberg
>>>> users are still on the upgrade war path with the wholo core2 dual, 8
>>>> core..yada
>>>> yada..How much do you think it cost ?? what's the real TCO??
>>>
>>>You might be on the upgrade war path, but there is no war here - only
>>>gaining more and more power for my investment with minimal annual cost.
>>>Since 1999 how many PT users upgraded from Mix to HD? The cost there
is
>>>thousands, not hundreds - for many it was well over $10k, $20k or $50k.
>>>>
>>>> If I'm honest, I'll tell I have spent over 6K over the last 5 years,
>not
>>>> counting software..And thats being kind.
>>>
>>>But you don't get Digi products free do you? They also cost. You have
>>to
>>>buy conversion apps, encoders separately, plugins at double the native
>cost.
>>>That adds up at a much faster rate. With a PT rig, you still have to
buy
>>a
>>>Mac or PC, Cubase/Nuendo/Logic, etc to run a decent sequencer and VSTi's,
>>>where my system is completely integrated and cross-compatible. I could
>>add
>>>a Mac, or 3 or 4 and still be cross-compatible, completely linked and
>>>synced, and upgrade for a few hundred whenever the mood strikes.
>>>
>>>>
>>>> With evey mention of a new Processor, comes the dream of Zero lantency
>>for
>>>> the Native. Now, we know our pre-64 bit cpu investments over that last
>>couple
>>>> of years has been a sham..
>>>> Sure we can run a few more plugins, but that's about it..
>>>
>>>You are superimposing your own somewhat extreme reaction and frustration
>>on
>>>every other native user, and/or reading a few posts and assuming a handful
>>>of computer-compulsive users represent the DAW world. That's about as
>far
>>>from the truth as you could be, Lamont.
>>>>
>>>> To me and my circle of producers and engineers, all have or will be
going
>>>> Pro Tool HD.. Depending on the needs, HD 2 acell seems to be the popular
>>>> choice. Maybe your circle of music friend are going Native, not mine..and
>>>> these guys are heavey hitters in he game.
>>>
>>>You are assuming my circle is somehow lowly, inferior light weights.
Sorry,
>>>but your are generalizing, making erroneous assumptions and apparently
>think
>>>quite highly of your own view of success. Good for you. There is a good
>>>bit of complete ignorant crap coming from "heavy hitters" these days,
so
>>be
>>>careful how you support your views.
>>>
>>>> Like the Nuendo forum discusion pointed out: It seems(like always) that
>>we
>>>> have different needs. The ITB guys need near or closest to zero latency
>>as
>>>> possible. Where as the guys who just edits and mix , run their daw at
>>1024
>>>> and care about zero latency.
>>>
>>>For one, it is short-sighted to simply segregate native DAW users from
>>>Protools users as if there is a superior need within the Protools market.
>>>The needs are based on studio function and preference, not superiority.
>>>Many recording studios with plenty of high end gear put out crappy
>>>productions, whereas a composer or producer with less gear can easily
be
>>>working on a much higher quality level, with a much higher level of
>>>expertise (for example Steve Tushar producing sound design for Disney
films,
>>>etc, all from his basement with Nuendo and an MC; or Hans Zimmer making
>>$50
>>>million a year scoring films, with a large staff, and racks of computer
>>>systems - the PT rig for tracking, but not production). I know the points
>>>at which one chooses one solution over another.
>>>>
>>>> I think in the future, it would best(for all) to say what application
>>you
>>>> work in before making statements or suggestions to anyone. Because everyone
>>>> has differnt studio, workflow needs.
>>>
>>>Yes, and to research your comments before reciting marketing or user hype.
>>>Not all users with a recording studio gig are well versed in the technical
>>>realities of the gear and the market we are in. Let's also include the
>>day
>>>gig as well to know who does this daily and who does it in off hours.
>>>>
>>>> Dedric, you mainly work in Post, where as I work in a more commercial
>>studio.
>>>> Our needs and opinions will be vastly different.
>>>
>>>Lamont, let's be clear, my studio is commercial - I work daily with high
>>>paying clients. I just don't hire it out for use by others for recording
>>>whatever band wants to come by. My clientele is easily as demanding and
>>>high end, and perhaps moreso than larger commercial studios recording
bands
>>>and artists. Different horses for different courses. The large format
>>>studio is a dying breed, so I'm not sure I would tout that as the elite
>>of
>>>the creative arts industry at the moment.
>>>>
>>>> That's he problem with these kinds of dscusions in forums. You have
a
>>ITB,
>>>> one room dude, running abelton live( nothing wrong with that), telling
>>dude
>>>> who works at a facility that abelton live would be good for them ..
>>>>
>>>Are you referring to anyone in particular, or is that a generalization?
>> If
>>>the latter, it doesn't really apply here. Recommendations here are always
>>>valid as you don't always know what is best for the original poster.
>>>
>>>Dedric
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>
>
Re: Would someone please explain direct monitoring? [message #89576 is a reply to message #89572] Sun, 09 September 2007 21:55 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Dedric Terry is currently offline  Dedric Terry   UNITED STATES
Messages: 788
Registered: June 2007
Senior Member
Lamont....

On 9/9/07 8:16 PM, in article 46e4a91a$1@linux, "LaMont"
<jjdpro@ameritech.net> wrote:

>
> Cont..
> You stated:Many recording studios with plenty of high end gear put out crappy
> productions"
>
> Of course anybody with some money can go into wold-calss facilty say Ocean
> Way http://www.oceanwaystudios.com/ . Does not guarantee a great recording.
> But, that does not deminish the fact that the Facilty is world class.

Of course it doesn't, but we weren't talking about how large a facility has
to be to be considered world class, or even the concept of a world class
facility - but rather the fact that gear doesn't make you talented and
knowledgeable. There is a wide range of studios around, as well as a wide
range of talent going in and coming out. But the question still remains, is
your definition of a high end professional one with a lot of high end
expensive gear, or a high level of skill? (Note that you changed the
discussion to "world class recording facility", not what makes the engineer
skilled and knowledgeable, which was the detour branch off of the original
native vs. hybrid-hardware discussion).

My studio does professional work for high end clients. Just because it
isn't large enough to mix for Dreamworks or Paramount, doesn't make me less
skilled in general. You have to be careful how you associate your skill with
the facility you work in.

>
> So, your point is not valid.

My point is valid - great gear doesn't make great talent. Either I'm way
pickier than you are, or you don't hear some records the way I do. I can
name multi-platinum records that quite frankly, sound terrible by any
reasonable sonic standard. I think we've had this discussion before and I'm
pretty sure we agreed, so don't defect just to take an opposing viewpoint
here. :-)

> As well as always, regurgitating tech list
> that listed on a products web site or reciting what somone is said that's
> linked to the company as Gospel. Those comapany types lie all the time and
> mis-state facts and details about thier producs. So, you giving your so-called
> "facts" based on a product media sheet, is weak ..

Hmmm... that sounds familiar to what I just said:

>> Yes, and to research your comments before reciting marketing or user hype.
>> Not all users with a recording studio gig are well versed in the technical
>> realities of the gear and the market we are in. Let's also include the
> day
>> gig as well to know who does this daily and who does it in off hours.

So you are taking my comments and turning them around and saying *I'm* the
one regurgitating tech lists?? Interesting, considering this conversation
was in fact about cost comparisons and viability of native vs. hybrid for
different situations. So, whatever argument you think will make you look
better is the one you take, even if it means changing the topic of the
discussion? Do you think that's really a good way to make a credible point?
I hope not, as it isn't.

I only come here for the enjoyment of discussion with other musicians,
engineers, and producers, regardless of their level of success and skill -
bedroom musician or seasoned pro - doesn't matter to me - everyone is the
same. I don't have anything to prove to anyone. Couldn't care less. I
love the range of talent and expertise here, enjoy contributing, and enjoy
learning too. I'm no better than anyone else, and you aren't either. Maybe
you could look past the nice gear around you a little more and stop assuming
or hoping it makes you better or more knowledgeable than anyone else. We
don't care about the gear around you - it's your input, thoughts and
participation here as a person that are most important, right or wrong,
expert or novice. Everyone has different experiences, and not all of us
relate our bios or past history to back up what we discuss here, no matter
how convincing that might be.

You don't know people such as me as well as you think you do, and you don't
have to prove anything to me or anyone. I'm happy for you that you have a
superb facility to work in - you obviously love what you do as much as I
love what I do. I don't expect you to know everything about every piece of
gear, or be technically versed in all that is digital or analog audio, but
likewise, don't expect me to know less just because my studio has a smaller
square footage, and I run Nuendo instead of ProTools (yes, a Fairlight
system is in the business plan...along with a bigger place to put it in).

Dedric

>
> How about actually taking the product for spin for awhile, then report back.
>
>
>
> Dedric Terry <dterry@keyofd.net> wrote:
>> On 9/9/07 5:20 PM, in article 46e47fcf$1@linux, "LaMont"
>> <jjdpro@ameritech.net> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> Dedric what are you talking about ??
>>>
>>> Asio may be the best for Native PC da users, but certainly not for mac
> users.
>>>
>> You never separated ASIO/PC from ASIO/Mac - your comments were about latency
>> in general. It is important to be technically accurate when making claims
>> about one platform or gear being better than others.
>>>
>>> All in all , with ASIO getting long winded, Asio has gotten old, and they
>>> Steinberg has not figured out how to fix the routing(Mixer) issuses that
>>> will put it on par with Pro Tool's software controlled hardware.
>>>
>> Where did you hear that ASIO was getting long winded? What do you base
> this
>> opinion on? I've already explained the difference between native and
>> hybrid-hardware. There is a full 3rd party operating system between native
>> and the hardware. With hybrid, there is only a bit of assembler code and
>> logic circuitry. Two different animals. Latency comparisons come about
> as
>> a matter of implementation and function, not direct technical similarities.
>>
>>> Your argument about HD plugins is valid, but Digi is throwing the kitchen
>>> sink these days with new purchases, not just trade-ins. Suffice it to
> say,
>>> when you purchase a new HD rig, you won't need to make many Plugin Purchases
>>> anytime soon.
>>
>> No doubt they see the native writing on the wall or they wouldn't have
>> bought M-Audio to actually support - they would have bought Steinberg and
>> promptly burned the development files and blown out any remaining stock.
>>>
>>> I totally disagre with you about Native being a Cheaper upgrade path.
> Since
>>> 1999, most semi and high end users have upgraded their systems at least
> 4
>>> -5 times.. With the intent of gaining more power. Even today, We sterinberg
>>> users are still on the upgrade war path with the wholo core2 dual, 8
>>> core..yada
>>> yada..How much do you think it cost ?? what's the real TCO??
>>
>> You might be on the upgrade war path, but there is no war here - only
>> gaining more and more power for my investment with minimal annual cost.
>> Since 1999 how many PT users upgraded from Mix to HD? The cost there is
>> thousands, not hundreds - for many it was well over $10k, $20k or $50k.
>>>
>>> If I'm honest, I'll tell I have spent over 6K over the last 5 years, not
>>> counting software..And thats being kind.
>>
>> But you don't get Digi products free do you? They also cost. You have
> to
>> buy conversion apps, encoders separately, plugins at double the native cost.
>> That adds up at a much faster rate. With a PT rig, you still have to buy
> a
>> Mac or PC, Cubase/Nuendo/Logic, etc to run a decent sequencer and VSTi's,
>> where my system is completely integrated and cross-compatible. I could
> add
>> a Mac, or 3 or 4 and still be cross-compatible, completely linked and
>> synced, and upgrade for a few hundred whenever the mood strikes.
>>
>>>
>>> With evey mention of a new Processor, comes the dream of Zero lantency
> for
>>> the Native. Now, we know our pre-64 bit cpu investments over that last
> couple
>>> of years has been a sham..
>>> Sure we can run a few more plugins, but that's about it..
>>
>> You are superimposing your own somewhat extreme reaction and frustration
> on
>> every other native user, and/or reading a few posts and assuming a handful
>> of computer-compulsive users represent the DAW world. That's about as far
>> from the truth as you could be, Lamont.
>>>
>>> To me and my circle of producers and engineers, all have or will be going
>>> Pro Tool HD.. Depending on the needs, HD 2 acell seems to be the popular
>>> choice. Maybe your circle of music friend are going Native, not mine..and
>>> these guys are heavey hitters in he game.
>>
>> You are assuming my circle is somehow lowly, inferior light weights. Sorry,
>> but your are generalizing, making erroneous assumptions and apparently think
>> quite highly of your own view of success. Good for you. There is a good
>> bit of complete ignorant crap coming from "heavy hitters" these days, so
> be
>> careful how you support your views.
>>
>>> Like the Nuendo forum discusion pointed out: It seems(like always) that
> we
>>> have different needs. The ITB guys need near or closest to zero latency
> as
>>> possible. Where as the guys who just edits and mix , run their daw at
> 1024
>>> and care about zero latency.
>>
>> For one, it is short-sighted to simply segregate native DAW users from
>> Protools users as if there is a superior need within the Protools market.
>> The needs are based on studio function and preference, not superiority.
>> Many recording studios with plenty of high end gear put out crappy
>> productions, whereas a composer or producer with less gear can easily be
>> working on a much higher quality level, with a much higher level of
>> expertise (for example Steve Tushar producing sound design for Disney films,
>> etc, all from his basement with Nuendo and an MC; or Hans Zimmer making
> $50
>> million a year scoring films, with a large staff, and racks of computer
>> systems - the PT rig for tracking, but not production). I know the points
>> at which one chooses one solution over another.
>>>
>>> I think in the future, it would best(for all) to say what application
> you
>>> work in before making statements or suggestions to anyone. Because everyone
>>> has differnt studio, workflow needs.
>>
>> Yes, and to research your comments before reciting marketing or user hype.
>> Not all users with a recording studio gig are well versed in the technical
>> realities of the gear and the market we are in. Let's also include the
> day
>> gig as well to know who does this daily and who does it in off hours.
>>>
>>> Dedric, you mainly work in Post, where as I work in a more commercial
> studio.
>>> Our needs and opinions will be vastly different.
>>
>> Lamont, let's be clear, my studio is commercial - I work daily with high
>> paying clients. I just don't hire it out for use by others for recording
>> whatever band wants to come by. My clientele is easily as demanding and
>> high end, and perhaps moreso than larger commercial studios recording bands
>> and artists. Different horses for different courses. The large format
>> studio is a dying breed, so I'm not sure I would tout that as the elite
> of
>> the creative arts industry at the moment.
>>>
>>> That's he problem with these kinds of dscusions in forums. You have a
> ITB,
>>> one room dude, running abelton live( nothing wrong with that), telling
> dude
>>> who works at a facility that abelton live would be good for them ..
>>>
>> Are you referring to anyone in particular, or is that a generalization?
> If
>> the latter, it doesn't really apply here. Recommendations here are always
>> valid as you don't always know what is best for the original poster.
>>
>> Dedric
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>
Re: Would someone please explain direct monitoring? [message #89577 is a reply to message #89575] Sun, 09 September 2007 22:48 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Neil is currently offline  Neil
Messages: 1645
Registered: April 2006
Senior Member
"LaMont" <jjdpro@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>Okay..But, but my point was to answer the statement about
>crappy music being made in so called pro facilities. crappy
>clients coming in with crappy music can happen at level of
>studio.
>Big buck facility,does not ensure top quality product.

Everybody here knows this much: you can make great music with
crap gear & crap music with great gear. Ideally, if you can
make great music with great gear, then every now & then you get
the right blend of luck & skill on both sides of the glass, and
everything gels just right. As far as crappy clients go, you
CAN do some degree of turd-polishing. Look, this is life,
sometimes shit just is a waste of time - bad music, bad
players, bad gear, bad engineers... this is probably the
majority of what gets recorded! lol

We're talking about practical applications & I think that's
what Dedric is trying to say, as well. PTHD is NOT the solution
for everybody. I've said here before that if I had a fully-
commercial facility, I'd absolutely have an HD rig, but really
for the following reasons:
1.) Ease of Compatibilty with other facilities.
2.) Plain & simple marketing - people want PT? OK, fine, I've
got PT! No need to convince someone otherwise until they get in
there & you can show 'em the difference if you want.

That's it! No other reason! I do think the HD convertors sound
very good (while the 888's sounded like ass), but there are
other good-sounding convertors, as well. IOW, there is no sonic-
specific reason to go with HD, in my view. None.

BTW, I find it ironic that you espouse PT so much as
being the "pro" solution, and talk down to those who do not
agree with you, when you yourself DO NOT OWN IT!!! You have an
LE system, do you not? Big fucking difference between the HD-
196 convertors & whateverthefuck you're using in your LE rig!

You DO tend to make some empirical statements without really
thinking about it, ya know.

Neil
Re: Would someone please explain direct monitoring? [message #89578 is a reply to message #89576] Sun, 09 September 2007 22:49 Go to previous messageGo to next message
LaMontt  is currently offline  LaMontt   
Messages: 424
Registered: January 2007
Senior Member

Dedric, we are not alking about Engineering skills, at least I won;t because
that debate and deiscusion is truly appls and oranges.
I will say, that even todays top engineers and producers have what ethy term
Pro-project studios. Define:

A studio that:
-Hard wired with the gear that producer /engineer uses
-Not flexible to cater to different types of recording session.

The above example is the new norm. Can bad work come out of these Pro _project
studios.. Yes. It happens all the time.

But, around hear, like or not, guys are buying Pro Tools LE before they purchase
Cuabase SX/4. As limited as LE is, if they cannot afford HD at the time,
they go with LE.

Now I think that's stupid of course, but that's market hear in Michigan.
Nuendo/Cuabse base studios, semi, private, Pro-project are Digi first.

See, it's all about perception. It almost like the young guys and Nikes Gym
Shoes or Air Jordans. If you are not wearing them , your not in the game.
You're lame. Pro Tools anything(M-Powered, LE,etc) is like Air Jordan Shoes.
You're cool and in the Game.

I'm a bit of a rebel. But,since I put out good results using whatever, I
don't catch the heat. But, most record projects I get asked to work on ususally
end up on Pro Tools.

I do disagree with you on Pro Tools not being a compositional tool. These
days more and more guys are re-discovering all of that cool midi stuff digi
has been throwing in. Since the purchase of Wizoo, they now have the team
inm place to deliver all kinds of wonderful virtual instruments..

I will say this.. Digi surpased Cubase /SX in Rewrire implementation. Slick
Slick slick.. Let's say I'm in Protools 7.3 and I want to Rewire in say...Acid
Pro ..Okay call up acid pro.. get a loop or 2...Instant synce in PT..Okay
nothing new there..BUT...We close the Pro Tools project and close(SAVE) the
acid project..

Next time we open up that project in Pro Tools, it lauches Acid pro with
the correct project and loopss..! Lock and ready to go , all by just opening
up the project in Pro Tools.

they have some other nice goodie in their new midi implementation. hey will
be a major player in this area soon.. Have you noticed those slick Virual
Instruments coming via Digi/Wizoo-aka-Air. With more coming in 08. Soon
Slo-Tools will be a one stop shop..







Dedric Terry <dterry@keyofd.net> wrote:
>Lamont....
>
>On 9/9/07 8:16 PM, in article 46e4a91a$1@linux, "LaMont"
><jjdpro@ameritech.net> wrote:
>
>>
>> Cont..
>> You stated:Many recording studios with plenty of high end gear put out
crappy
>> productions"
>>
>> Of course anybody with some money can go into wold-calss facilty say Ocean
>> Way http://www.oceanwaystudios.com/ . Does not guarantee a great recording.
>> But, that does not deminish the fact that the Facilty is world class.
>
>Of course it doesn't, but we weren't talking about how large a facility
has
>to be to be considered world class, or even the concept of a world class
>facility - but rather the fact that gear doesn't make you talented and
>knowledgeable. There is a wide range of studios around, as well as a wide
>range of talent going in and coming out. But the question still remains,
is
>your definition of a high end professional one with a lot of high end
>expensive gear, or a high level of skill? (Note that you changed the
>discussion to "world class recording facility", not what makes the engineer
>skilled and knowledgeable, which was the detour branch off of the original
>native vs. hybrid-hardware discussion).
>
>My studio does professional work for high end clients. Just because it
>isn't large enough to mix for Dreamworks or Paramount, doesn't make me less
>skilled in general. You have to be careful how you associate your skill
with
>the facility you work in.
>
>>
>> So, your point is not valid.
>
>My point is valid - great gear doesn't make great talent. Either I'm way
>pickier than you are, or you don't hear some records the way I do. I can
>name multi-platinum records that quite frankly, sound terrible by any
>reasonable sonic standard. I think we've had this discussion before and
I'm
>pretty sure we agreed, so don't defect just to take an opposing viewpoint
>here. :-)
>
>> As well as always, regurgitating tech list
>> that listed on a products web site or reciting what somone is said that's
>> linked to the company as Gospel. Those comapany types lie all the time
and
>> mis-state facts and details about thier producs. So, you giving your so-called
>> "facts" based on a product media sheet, is weak ..
>
>Hmmm... that sounds familiar to what I just said:
>
>>> Yes, and to research your comments before reciting marketing or user
hype.
>>> Not all users with a recording studio gig are well versed in the technical
>>> realities of the gear and the market we are in. Let's also include the
>> day
>>> gig as well to know who does this daily and who does it in off hours.
>
>So you are taking my comments and turning them around and saying *I'm* the
>one regurgitating tech lists?? Interesting, considering this conversation
>was in fact about cost comparisons and viability of native vs. hybrid for
>different situations. So, whatever argument you think will make you look
>better is the one you take, even if it means changing the topic of the
>discussion? Do you think that's really a good way to make a credible point?
>I hope not, as it isn't.
>
>I only come here for the enjoyment of discussion with other musicians,
>engineers, and producers, regardless of their level of success and skill
-
>bedroom musician or seasoned pro - doesn't matter to me - everyone is the
>same. I don't have anything to prove to anyone. Couldn't care less. I
>love the range of talent and expertise here, enjoy contributing, and enjoy
>learning too. I'm no better than anyone else, and you aren't either. Maybe
>you could look past the nice gear around you a little more and stop assuming
>or hoping it makes you better or more knowledgeable than anyone else. We
>don't care about the gear around you - it's your input, thoughts and
>participation here as a person that are most important, right or wrong,
>expert or novice. Everyone has different experiences, and not all of us
>relate our bios or past history to back up what we discuss here, no matter
>how convincing that might be.
>
>You don't know people such as me as well as you think you do, and you don't
>have to prove anything to me or anyone. I'm happy for you that you have
a
>superb facility to work in - you obviously love what you do as much as I
>love what I do. I don't expect you to know everything about every piece
of
>gear, or be technically versed in all that is digital or analog audio, but
>likewise, don't expect me to know less just because my studio has a smaller
>square footage, and I run Nuendo instead of ProTools (yes, a Fairlight
>system is in the business plan...along with a bigger place to put it in).
>
>Dedric
>
>>
>> How about actually taking the product for spin for awhile, then report
back.
>>
>>
>>
>> Dedric Terry <dterry@keyofd.net> wrote:
>>> On 9/9/07 5:20 PM, in article 46e47fcf$1@linux, "LaMont"
>>> <jjdpro@ameritech.net> wrote:
>>>
>>>>
>>>> Dedric what are you talking about ??
>>>>
>>>> Asio may be the best for Native PC da users, but certainly not for mac
>> users.
>>>>
>>> You never separated ASIO/PC from ASIO/Mac - your comments were about
latency
>>> in general. It is important to be technically accurate when making claims
>>> about one platform or gear being better than others.
>>>>
>>>> All in all , with ASIO getting long winded, Asio has gotten old, and
they
>>>> Steinberg has not figured out how to fix the routing(Mixer) issuses
that
>>>> will put it on par with Pro Tool's software controlled hardware.
>>>>
>>> Where did you hear that ASIO was getting long winded? What do you base
>> this
>>> opinion on? I've already explained the difference between native and
>>> hybrid-hardware. There is a full 3rd party operating system between
native
>>> and the hardware. With hybrid, there is only a bit of assembler code
and
>>> logic circuitry. Two different animals. Latency comparisons come about
>> as
>>> a matter of implementation and function, not direct technical similarities.
>>>
>>>> Your argument about HD plugins is valid, but Digi is throwing the kitchen
>>>> sink these days with new purchases, not just trade-ins. Suffice it to
>> say,
>>>> when you purchase a new HD rig, you won't need to make many Plugin Purchases
>>>> anytime soon.
>>>
>>> No doubt they see the native writing on the wall or they wouldn't have
>>> bought M-Audio to actually support - they would have bought Steinberg
and
>>> promptly burned the development files and blown out any remaining stock.
>>>>
>>>> I totally disagre with you about Native being a Cheaper upgrade path.
>> Since
>>>> 1999, most semi and high end users have upgraded their systems at least
>> 4
>>>> -5 times.. With the intent of gaining more power. Even today, We sterinberg
>>>> users are still on the upgrade war path with the wholo core2 dual, 8
>>>> core..yada
>>>> yada..How much do you think it cost ?? what's the real TCO??
>>>
>>> You might be on the upgrade war path, but there is no war here - only
>>> gaining more and more power for my investment with minimal annual cost.
>>> Since 1999 how many PT users upgraded from Mix to HD? The cost there
is
>>> thousands, not hundreds - for many it was well over $10k, $20k or $50k.
>>>>
>>>> If I'm honest, I'll tell I have spent over 6K over the last 5 years,
not
>>>> counting software..And thats being kind.
>>>
>>> But you don't get Digi products free do you? They also cost. You have
>> to
>>> buy conversion apps, encoders separately, plugins at double the native
cost.
>>> That adds up at a much faster rate. With a PT rig, you still have to
buy
>> a
>>> Mac or PC, Cubase/Nuendo/Logic, etc to run a decent sequencer and VSTi's,
>>> where my system is completely integrated and cross-compatible. I could
>> add
>>> a Mac, or 3 or 4 and still be cross-compatible, completely linked and
>>> synced, and upgrade for a few hundred whenever the mood strikes.
>>>
>>>>
>>>> With evey mention of a new Processor, comes the dream of Zero lantency
>> for
>>>> the Native. Now, we know our pre-64 bit cpu investments over that last
>> couple
>>>> of years has been a sham..
>>>> Sure we can run a few more plugins, but that's about it..
>>>
>>> You are superimposing your own somewhat extreme reaction and frustration
>> on
>>> every other native user, and/or reading a few posts and assuming a handful
>>> of computer-compulsive users represent the DAW world. That's about as
far
>>> from the truth as you could be, Lamont.
>>>>
>>>> To me and my circle of producers and engineers, all have or will be
going
>>>> Pro Tool HD.. Depending on the needs, HD 2 acell seems to be the popular
>>>> choice. Maybe your circle of music friend are going Native, not mine..and
>>>> these guys are heavey hitters in he game.
>>>
>>> You are assuming my circle is somehow lowly, inferior light weights.
Sorry,
>>> but your are generalizing, making erroneous assumptions and apparently
think
>>> quite highly of your own view of success. Good for you. There is a
good
>>> bit of complete ignorant crap coming from "heavy hitters" these days,
so
>> be
>>> careful how you support your views.
>>>
>>>> Like the Nuendo forum discusion pointed out: It seems(like always) that
>> we
>>>> have different needs. The ITB guys need near or closest to zero latency
>> as
>>>> possible. Where as the guys who just edits and mix , run their daw at
>> 1024
>>>> and care about zero latency.
>>>
>>> For one, it is short-sighted to simply segregate native DAW users from
>>> Protools users as if there is a superior need within the Protools market.
>>> The needs are based on studio function and preference, not superiority.
>>> Many recording studios with plenty of high end gear put out crappy
>>> productions, whereas a composer or producer with less gear can easily
be
>>> working on a much higher quality level, with a much higher level of
>>> expertise (for example Steve Tushar producing sound design for Disney
films,
>>> etc, all from his basement with Nuendo and an MC; or Hans Zimmer making
>> $50
>>> million a year scoring films, with a large staff, and racks of computer
>>> systems - the PT rig for tracking, but not production). I know the points
>>> at which one chooses one solution over another.
>>>>
>>>> I think in the future, it would best(for all) to say what application
>> you
>>>> work in before making statements or suggestions to anyone. Because everyone
>>>> has differnt studio, workflow needs.
>>>
>>> Yes, and to research your comments before reciting marketing or user
hype.
>>> Not all users with a recording studio gig are well versed in the technical
>>> realities of the gear and the market we are in. Let's also include the
>> day
>>> gig as well to know who does this daily and who does it in off hours.
>>>>
>>>> Dedric, you mainly work in Post, where as I work in a more commercial
>> studio.
>>>> Our needs and opinions will be vastly different.
>>>
>>> Lamont, let's be clear, my studio is commercial - I work daily with high
>>> paying clients. I just don't hire it out for use by others for recording
>>> whatever band wants to come by. My clientele is easily as demanding
and
>>> high end, and perhaps moreso than larger commercial studios recording
bands
>>> and artists. Different horses for different courses. The large format
>>> studio is a dying breed, so I'm not sure I would tout that as the elite
>> of
>>> the creative arts industry at the moment.
>>>>
>>>> That's he problem with these kinds of dscusions in forums. You have
a
>> ITB,
>>>> one room dude, running abelton live( nothing wrong with that), telling
>> dude
>>>> who works at a facility that abelton live would be good for them ..
>>>>
>>> Are you referring to anyone in particular, or is that a generalization?
>> If
>>> the latter, it doesn't really apply here. Recommendations here are always
>>> valid as you don't always know what is best for the original poster.
>>>
>>> Dedric
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>
>
Re: Would someone please explain direct monitoring? [message #89579 is a reply to message #89577] Sun, 09 September 2007 23:03 Go to previous messageGo to next message
LaMontt  is currently offline  LaMontt   
Messages: 424
Registered: January 2007
Senior Member

Neil,I use PT M-Powered at home. HD 3 at the studio(s) where I work in. I
do own HD software. Just have not settled on the converters.

HD is a more flexible routing solution for studios that need to integrate
hardware, easily with minimal latency. I'm sorry, but HD is one Hell of a
Digital Mixer.Even BrianT will say so.

Paris's patch bay was on it's way..Nuendo/SX okay.. To be honest, I think
that tehr guys who invented VST never imagined that engineers,, not msuicians,
but engineers would get so invloved with Wanting to integrated their Hardware
into Cubase.

This ahs thrown them for a complet loop(Steinberg).VST by it's very definition,
Virtual STudio Technology,was meant to be jsut that..Virtual. Software only..
Not, adding Hardware devices.

It will remains to be scene if they pull it off without dedicated Hardware.

Personally Ilove DSP based systems. If Paris were to make a comaback , even
under another name company, I'd jump in a heart beat..

Now that Lynx's have the digi mod , that migh be the way I'll go.

"Neil" <OIUOIU@OIU.com> wrote:
>
>"LaMont" <jjdpro@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>Okay..But, but my point was to answer the statement about
>>crappy music being made in so called pro facilities. crappy
>>clients coming in with crappy music can happen at level of
>>studio.
>>Big buck facility,does not ensure top quality product.
>
>Everybody here knows this much: you can make great music with
>crap gear & crap music with great gear. Ideally, if you can
>make great music with great gear, then every now & then you get
>the right blend of luck & skill on both sides of the glass, and
>everything gels just right. As far as crappy clients go, you
>CAN do some degree of turd-polishing. Look, this is life,
>sometimes shit just is a waste of time - bad music, bad
>players, bad gear, bad engineers... this is probably the
>majority of what gets recorded! lol
>
>We're talking about practical applications & I think that's
>what Dedric is trying to say, as well. PTHD is NOT the solution
>for everybody. I've said here before that if I had a fully-
>commercial facility, I'd absolutely have an HD rig, but really
>for the following reasons:
>1.) Ease of Compatibilty with other facilities.
>2.) Plain & simple marketing - people want PT? OK, fine, I've
>got PT! No need to convince someone otherwise until they get in
>there & you can show 'em the difference if you want.
>
>That's it! No other reason! I do think the HD convertors sound
>very good (while the 888's sounded like ass), but there are
>other good-sounding convertors, as well. IOW, there is no sonic-
>specific reason to go with HD, in my view. None.
>
>BTW, I find it ironic that you espouse PT so much as
>being the "pro" solution, and talk down to those who do not
>agree with you, when you yourself DO NOT OWN IT!!! You have an
>LE system, do you not? Big fucking difference between the HD-
>196 convertors & whateverthefuck you're using in your LE rig!
>
>You DO tend to make some empirical statements without really
>thinking about it, ya know.
>
>Neil
Re: Would someone please explain direct monitoring? [message #89589 is a reply to message #89571] Mon, 10 September 2007 08:32 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Dedric Terry is currently offline  Dedric Terry   UNITED STATES
Messages: 788
Registered: June 2007
Senior Member
Lamont - instead of just replying to your latest post, I've copied sections
from a couple of posts to address at once, then leave the topic alone for
now:

On 9/9/07 6:59 PM, in article 46e4970f$1@linux, "LaMont"

<jjdpro@ameritech.net> wrote:

> I guess we are back to our usuall disagreement about wha's considered Pro.
> That's fine, you can call pro anything you like..I'll refrain form such
> terms..But,
> I will use terms as Comercial and Project..even pro project studios. To me,
> jsut because a person has his PC/Mac in a office building does not make him
> comerical. There are certain indusry tools you must have to be considered
> commerical. Even you have high-end clients.

Usual disagreement? Okay.... My point has simply been that working in a
large studio doesn't make you more knowledgeable than someone who owns their
own music/audio business. We were talking about native vs. hardware hybrid,
not commercial vs. project studio. Commercial is a broad description.
Project has a part time/semi-pro connotation, but that's beside the point...
just fyi.

Also, be careful - your comments at times come across as condescending. It
puts you in a position of someday having to really back it up with a serious
level of credibility. Maybe not what you intended.

> Your needs and my needs are vastly different> I really need at least 32
> channels
> of I/O for tracking..

Great - the more the merrier. :-)) 32+ is fine for tracking bands, etc.

.... wouldn't be enough for my work though, oddly enough. I run 48 now and
will be doubling that in the very near future. :-)) No, it isn't a pissing
match at all - just having a little fun with the notion that I/O count was a
distinction between our needs. I'm also pointing out that technical
requirements and knowledge aren't directly related to the size of a console,
inputs, etc. I know the point you were making - you track bands, I don't -
the differences in needs are obvious, but the technical differences and
requirements aren't as diverse as you might think. I need studios like
yours to track in from time to time, so I'm happy to support that market
when the need arises. Large studios aren't somehow superior to other areas
of the audio industry. They are however large investments that are
difficult to keep profitable. There are more lucrative areas of the music
industry.

> I do disagree with you on Pro Tools not being a compositional tool. These
> days more and more guys are re-discovering all of that cool midi stuff digi
> has been throwing in. Since the purchase of Wizoo, they now have the team
> inm place to deliver all kinds of wonderful virtual instruments..

I know of no serious, established composers using ProTools itself for
composition. ProTools is used by many for tracking and stems transfers to
post/mixing, but not composition. For production work in other markets
where the composing element is less demanding, I'm sure ProTools midi may be
fine - Digi does seem to be going for the one-stop shop, as is everyone.
Just be careful to qualify your comments - too often you make blanket
statements that sound like you consider your perception to be the last word
on the subject for everyone. It is just your perception or opinion though,
not reality in other markets or areas, much less the absolute truth for the
industry.

Lastly...

>Truth is , there are more Nuendo "crack" users than legit users. I don;t
>knwo how Steingberg is making any money. Cubase yes, but Nuendo..No..

Hmm...interesting that you say there are more crack users of Nuendo on the
market than paid copies - not of the users I know, and I don't think you
know that to be the truth. It doesn't sound like a very high integrity user
base you use as a measuring stick for Nuendo, so that also changes how one
should view your perception of the product itself.

Just out of curiosity, do you work at the church studio full time now?
Didn't you work IT at one time?

Regards,
Dedric
Re: Would someone please explain direct monitoring? [message #89603 is a reply to message #89589] Mon, 10 September 2007 16:58 Go to previous messageGo to next message
LaMont is currently offline  LaMont
Messages: 828
Registered: October 2005
Senior Member
"Just out of curiosity, do you work at the church studio full time now? Didn't
you work IT at one time?"

The answer is yes to both. I'm a fulltime Producer/Engineer at my Church.
I also, head the IT department.

I don't make blanket statements, just my opinions.

You tend to have a "Napoleon Complex" when it comes to discussing Nuendo
and Native vs Dsp. As well, you're overly sensitive to anyone who has a negative
thing to say about it.

You say that James M is overly sensative abut any Mac critisism, but so are
you.

Look, we come in here to answer question, ask questions and give gear opinions.
I really don't understand how it is that you can take my "opinions" and as
blanket statements?

I'm a consumer in this game like yourself. I use the products, and I have
a right to say what I think about a product that I spent my or the company/client
I work for.
That's all.

Lastly, I very much respect your vast knowledge on DAWS. I too learn form
your post and your way of getting down to the nitty-gritty of a said technical
problem..

P.s. Let me know when you get your Euphonix MC or maybe the DM2000. :) Take
care..



Dedric Terry <dterry@keyofd.net> wrote:
>Lamont - instead of just replying to your latest post, I've copied sections
>from a couple of posts to address at once, then leave the topic alone for
>now:
>
>On 9/9/07 6:59 PM, in article 46e4970f$1@linux, "LaMont"
>
><jjdpro@ameritech.net> wrote:
>
>> I guess we are back to our usuall disagreement about wha's considered
Pro.
>> That's fine, you can call pro anything you like..I'll refrain form such
>> terms..But,
>> I will use terms as Comercial and Project..even pro project studios. To
me,
>> jsut because a person has his PC/Mac in a office building does not make
him
>> comerical. There are certain indusry tools you must have to be considered
>> commerical. Even you have high-end clients.
>
>Usual disagreement? Okay.... My point has simply been that working in
a
>large studio doesn't make you more knowledgeable than someone who owns their
>own music/audio business. We were talking about native vs. hardware hybrid,
>not commercial vs. project studio. Commercial is a broad description.
>Project has a part time/semi-pro connotation, but that's beside the point...
>just fyi.
>
>Also, be careful - your comments at times come across as condescending.
It
>puts you in a position of someday having to really back it up with a serious
>level of credibility. Maybe not what you intended.
>
>> Your needs and my needs are vastly different> I really need at least 32
>> channels
>> of I/O for tracking..
>
>Great - the more the merrier. :-)) 32+ is fine for tracking bands, etc.
>
>... wouldn't be enough for my work though, oddly enough. I run 48 now and
>will be doubling that in the very near future. :-)) No, it isn't a pissing
>match at all - just having a little fun with the notion that I/O count was
a
>distinction between our needs. I'm also pointing out that technical
>requirements and knowledge aren't directly related to the size of a console,
>inputs, etc. I know the point you were making - you track bands, I don't
-
>the differences in needs are obvious, but the technical differences and
>requirements aren't as diverse as you might think. I need studios like
>yours to track in from time to time, so I'm happy to support that market
>when the need arises. Large studios aren't somehow superior to other areas
>of the audio industry. They are however large investments that are
>difficult to keep profitable. There are more lucrative areas of the music
>industry.
>
>> I do disagree with you on Pro Tools not being a compositional tool. These
>> days more and more guys are re-discovering all of that cool midi stuff
digi
>> has been throwing in. Since the purchase of Wizoo, they now have the team
>> inm place to deliver all kinds of wonderful virtual instruments..
>
>I know of no serious, established composers using ProTools itself for
>composition. ProTools is used by many for tracking and stems transfers
to
>post/mixing, but not composition. For production work in other markets
>where the composing element is less demanding, I'm sure ProTools midi may
be
>fine - Digi does seem to be going for the one-stop shop, as is everyone.
>Just be careful to qualify your comments - too often you make blanket
>statements that sound like you consider your perception to be the last word
>on the subject for everyone. It is just your perception or opinion though,
>not reality in other markets or areas, much less the absolute truth for
the
>industry.
>
>Lastly...
>
>>Truth is , there are more Nuendo "crack" users than legit users. I don;t
>>knwo how Steingberg is making any money. Cubase yes, but Nuendo..No..
>
>Hmm...interesting that you say there are more crack users of Nuendo on the
>market than paid copies - not of the users I know, and I don't think you
>know that to be the truth. It doesn't sound like a very high integrity
user
>base you use as a measuring stick for Nuendo, so that also changes how one
>should view your perception of the product itself.
>
>Just out of curiosity, do you work at the church studio full time now?
>Didn't you work IT at one time?
>
>Regards,
>Dedric
>
Re: Would someone please explain direct monitoring? [message #89604 is a reply to message #89603] Mon, 10 September 2007 18:12 Go to previous message
Dedric Terry is currently offline  Dedric Terry   UNITED STATES
Messages: 788
Registered: June 2007
Senior Member
"LaMont" <jjdpro@ameritech.net> wrote in message news:46e5da33$1@linux...
>
> I don't make blanket statements, just my opinions.
>
> You tend to have a "Napoleon Complex" when it comes to discussing Nuendo
> and Native vs Dsp. As well, you're overly sensitive to anyone who has a
> negative
> thing to say about it.

Lol - no, you just never really understood what I was saying, or at least
trying to without being too blunt, but it doesn't matter - just not worth
it, and never really was. ;-)

I know the pros and cons of both very well (been there, used and considered
PT longterm a few times, and always keep it as an option), and when I
recommend a system to a client or other user, I give them the pros and cons
of both and tell them to try both and decide for themselves what works best.

> P.s. Let me know when you get your Euphonix MC or maybe the DM2000. :)
> Take
> care..

The DM is very nice, and a bit more cost effective than the MC, but the
integration on the MC with
Nuendo and other apps (including switching between apps) is a beautiful
thing. Euphonix did a nice job on this unit.
Add in Nuendo 4's Euphonix style automation (some say it's even better), and
it should be a rocking pair.

Best of luck,
Dedric

>
>
>
> Dedric Terry <dterry@keyofd.net> wrote:
>>Lamont - instead of just replying to your latest post, I've copied
>>sections
>>from a couple of posts to address at once, then leave the topic alone for
>>now:
>>
>>On 9/9/07 6:59 PM, in article 46e4970f$1@linux, "LaMont"
>>
>><jjdpro@ameritech.net> wrote:
>>
>>> I guess we are back to our usuall disagreement about wha's considered
> Pro.
>>> That's fine, you can call pro anything you like..I'll refrain form such
>>> terms..But,
>>> I will use terms as Comercial and Project..even pro project studios. To
> me,
>>> jsut because a person has his PC/Mac in a office building does not make
> him
>>> comerical. There are certain indusry tools you must have to be
>>> considered
>>> commerical. Even you have high-end clients.
>>
>>Usual disagreement? Okay.... My point has simply been that working in
> a
>>large studio doesn't make you more knowledgeable than someone who owns
>>their
>>own music/audio business. We were talking about native vs. hardware
>>hybrid,
>>not commercial vs. project studio. Commercial is a broad description.
>>Project has a part time/semi-pro connotation, but that's beside the
>>point...
>>just fyi.
>>
>>Also, be careful - your comments at times come across as condescending.
> It
>>puts you in a position of someday having to really back it up with a
>>serious
>>level of credibility. Maybe not what you intended.
>>
>>> Your needs and my needs are vastly different> I really need at least 32
>>> channels
>>> of I/O for tracking..
>>
>>Great - the more the merrier. :-)) 32+ is fine for tracking bands, etc.
>>
>>... wouldn't be enough for my work though, oddly enough. I run 48 now and
>>will be doubling that in the very near future. :-)) No, it isn't a
>>pissing
>>match at all - just having a little fun with the notion that I/O count was
> a
>>distinction between our needs. I'm also pointing out that technical
>>requirements and knowledge aren't directly related to the size of a
>>console,
>>inputs, etc. I know the point you were making - you track bands, I don't
> -
>>the differences in needs are obvious, but the technical differences and
>>requirements aren't as diverse as you might think. I need studios like
>>yours to track in from time to time, so I'm happy to support that market
>>when the need arises. Large studios aren't somehow superior to other
>>areas
>>of the audio industry. They are however large investments that are
>>difficult to keep profitable. There are more lucrative areas of the music
>>industry.
>>
>>> I do disagree with you on Pro Tools not being a compositional tool.
>>> These
>>> days more and more guys are re-discovering all of that cool midi stuff
> digi
>>> has been throwing in. Since the purchase of Wizoo, they now have the
>>> team
>>> inm place to deliver all kinds of wonderful virtual instruments..
>>
>>I know of no serious, established composers using ProTools itself for
>>composition. ProTools is used by many for tracking and stems transfers
> to
>>post/mixing, but not composition. For production work in other markets
>>where the composing element is less demanding, I'm sure ProTools midi may
> be
>>fine - Digi does seem to be going for the one-stop shop, as is everyone.
>>Just be careful to qualify your comments - too often you make blanket
>>statements that sound like you consider your perception to be the last
>>word
>>on the subject for everyone. It is just your perception or opinion
>>though,
>>not reality in other markets or areas, much less the absolute truth for
> the
>>industry.
>>
>>Lastly...
>>
>>>Truth is , there are more Nuendo "crack" users than legit users. I don;t
>>>knwo how Steingberg is making any money. Cubase yes, but Nuendo..No..
>>
>>Hmm...interesting that you say there are more crack users of Nuendo on the
>>market than paid copies - not of the users I know, and I don't think you
>>know that to be the truth. It doesn't sound like a very high integrity
> user
>>base you use as a measuring stick for Nuendo, so that also changes how one
>>should view your perception of the product itself.
>>
>>Just out of curiosity, do you work at the church studio full time now?
>>Didn't you work IT at one time?
>>
>>Regards,
>>Dedric
>>
>
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