![]() So it makes me think dropouts must be a driver thing? I finally gave up and installed a different NVIDIA card and the spikes went away. I Installed newer diver versions and still got dropouts. ![]() I searched the internet for days trying to find the old driver version and I could not find it. I investigated and I noticed the NVIDIA drivers versions were different from the old Win install vs the new Win install. After I reinstalled Windows 7, Cubase was spiking and I was getting dropouts. I had previously used Cubase 4.5 with XP and Win 7 with No issues for 13 years. Recently my Win 7 got corrupted and I reinstalled Windows from scratch with no hardware changes. I use Win 7 with Cubase 4.5 (I know it's 13 years old, if it ain't broke don't fix it as the say) !So I had a weird Cubase / NVIDIA quadro issue recently. I hated it when I'm the only unlucky guy ������. I find it particularly difficult to switch virtual instruments in a track (Reaper makes this very easy).Not sure when you last used Studio One, but all you have to do is click a button to have the screen scroll, following the "playhead". But I find Cubase to be the least intuitive of the three. It also probably has the most capability with synching to picture. It's probably the most advanced of the three in terms of total feature count and workflow sophistication capability. ![]() I find it particularly difficult to switch virtual instruments in a track (Reaper makes this very easy).Ĭubase has the most advanced midi features, and probably the best midi editing. Putting crosstalk in between tracks.Ĭubase has the most advanced midi features, and probably the best midi editing. It gets into modeling the groups, the mix buss, creating subtle circuit variations from track to track. Studio One also has some console emulation software that goes very deep. So you get clutter in your file directories on your computer. Studio One also creates a lot of folders for a project. What if I am working on a short instrumental track with no singing and no lyrics? Why is that a "song"? It should simply be called project. Studio One annoyingly calls projects "Songs". ![]() And of course, jumps will often happen at the worst time. This is very annoying, because when you are watching the audio playback, it jumps from screen to screen. I believe the technical term is it lacks "playhead follows cursor". Studio 1 does not have a scrolling screen. Visually boring looking, but they get the job done well. Their gate is excellent, and I use the midi transpose/midi velocity scaling stuff all the time. Reaper also has surprisingly good utility plugins that come with the DAW. But functionally, they are easy to get your work done with them. Reaper's windows for this stuff don't look as polished as the others. It is also easy to save your own effects chains by name and them load them in by name. I find copy-paste-delete of plugins very easy. It's the most intuitive way of creating and grouping tracks I have seen in a DAW. The track that gets indented on the screen is subordinate to the non-indented one. But it has a great way of grouping tracks. Reaper has the clunkiest midi of the three. I've studied these exact three in some depth.
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