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Prior to version 9, you needed an M-Powered consumer audio interface that was limited to 48kHz, or expensive, proprietary hardware if you wanted to record at bit rates beyond that. Pro Tools fell behind in the home creative audio market not so much because of creative lacks, but restrictive marketing practices.
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However, over the years, Pro Tools has acquired MIDI and sequencing abilities, as well as notation, so it’s a more than competent tool for creative purposes. In fact, the program’s in-line editing (editing done right on the track rather than a separate window) makes it a favorite of many. That’s its bread and butter and it’s very intuitive for traditional studio engineers. 7.5: Microsoft Surface Pro 3 and Sibel.Since its inception, Pro Tools’s outstanding mixing board mimicry has made it the pro’s choice for upscale audio recording and manipulation-the recording industry’s DAW, as it were. 7.5: Microsoft Surface Pro 3 and Sibelius? - Peter Roos, 19 Apr 02:38AM Joe Pearson | Product Designer | Sibelius How does that feel to everyone as an approach? Interested to know! If it's just a feature for the sake of demonstrating some impressive tech, but doesn't actually make the users workflow any faster, then I'm less interested. So for Sibelius - if we can use pen input to make note entry faster and more natural, then great. But when you need to get something done, is it really quicker to scribble filling in crotchets, waiting for them to be recognised, making corrections and so on? For me, I'm not convinced character recognition is quite there yet - it would have to be utterly transparent and flexible for the user in order for it to replace pen and paper. Character recognition using the pen is great, and it makes for a great video. That aside: Surface Pro support is something we are working on for v8, including note input. They're also great people aside from any Sibelius related matter, I might add, so I won't stand for their maltreatment.Īs for the management of Sibelius, there is Sam our product manager and me the product designer. We have a great, extremely talented team out there who have been able to pick up and fix longstanding issues with Sibelius that have existed for years (since version 2). I must pick up on the negative comments re. Revenue spreadsheets and bottom lines are what makes them tick, not necessarily what is best for the customers.īut here's another thought: even if it doesn't really work in Sibelius, I could still use the StaffPad for jotting down notes, and then by exporting an xml and importing that into Sibelius, keep working on a score bit by bit and putting it together. My skepticism is geared more towards the management of Avid, the guys who ultimately decide the course of the ship. I wouldn't want to put down the programmers in Kiev, by the way, I'm pretty sure they are very bright and motivated to do as good as job as they possibly can. I'm sure it's no small thing, and the StaffPad guys have been working on it for years.
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Yes Rob, I'd like to see and try the new version of Sibelius first before making the jump, in particular this new feature. 7.5: Microsoft Surface Pro 3 and Sibelius?
#Microsoft pro tools code#
Neuratron, who produce NotateMe for iOS and Android, have been working on handwritten music recognition for ten years."īut hey, a few cheap-rate outsourced code monkeys working for Avid can probably do it a lot quicker than the experts in the field ) It took the team behind StaffPad three years, working full-time, to come up with the handwritten music recognition in their application, and one of the developers of that product (Matt Tesch, of Google) had prior experience working in this area. "I would suggest you take a more sceptical view of what is included in this update. For example the Sib video shows you can draw line on your score with the pen, but Sib can't even try to convert it into a slur, tie, 8va line, repeat ending, or whatever, in your score. In the latest edition of Daniel Spreadbury's blog he makes the point (somewhere in the comments) that the Sib vapourware demo video is only using the Surface's touch input as an "new and improved mouse" - there is nothing comparable with the handwriting recognition in Staff Pad.