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Logic pro x review
Logic pro x review





logic pro x review

And to do what Logic does, you’ll need to drop about another $800 – $1,000 on plugins and instruments.

logic pro x review

Have you priced the industry standard Pro Tools? It’s $299.

logic pro x review

And for $199, it’s almost everything I’d ever want and need in a DAW. They did away with the magnetic locking power adaptor on some laptops, they… you get the point.īut then there’s Logic Pro X. The new iPhone can’t be used with normal headphones. They don’t make a low end computer with upgradable RAM any more. The free Logic Remote app stopped working on my old iPad 3 because Apple broke it with an update for no reason, other than to encourage me to buy a new iPad. My iPhone used to “just work,” but now it does things like change the podcast I’m listening to if I put my phone down too quickly. iTunes started life as a great music app and has turned into a nightmare that everyone hates. I was an iOS developer for a while, until I got tired of every iOS update breaking my software and requiring me to make changes. When Steve Jobs died, something inside of Apple died with him. Which in a way is unfortunate – lately I’ve been unhappy with Apple’s direction. And of everything I’ve used, Logic is hands down my favorite. Reaper is cheap but not easy to use.Įventually I settled on Logic Pro and have never looked back. I never liked Pro Tools because it’s a pain in the ass on many levels, but you have to have it if you want to do work from other studios. I liked Cubase because it was easy to use, but fairly buggy on the Mac at the time when I used it. I think that every DAW (digital audio workstation, for folks who don’t know) has pros and cons. I’m probably forgetting some programs from a long time ago that are no longer in business. In the past I’ve worked with Ableton Live, Audacity, Cubase, GarageBand, Logic Pro X, Nuendo, Pro Tools, Reaper, and Reason.







Logic pro x review