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abacab

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Everything posted by abacab

  1. You can still install and use Sonar X1 Producer offline and use it like you always have. But Sonar is no longer sold, supported, or updated. Your X1 download is still available in your old Cakewalk.com account. Cakewalk by BandLab is an updated version of Sonar Platinum that is owned and distributed by BandLab. It is currently supported and updates are periodically issued. You will need to go online to get it installed using BandLab Assistant, and then periodically go online to prevent it reverting to demo mode. But it is free, and always will be. Get Cakewalk by BandLab here: https://www.bandlab.com/products/cakewalk
  2. This is on sale for $29 USD. https://www.waves.com/plugins/cla-2a-compressor-limiter
  3. SWA Complete Sonar X2 - a playlist of 50 video tutorials. This is an older version of Sonar, but much of these core features will still apply to CbB. YouTube Playlist Chapter Contents (1-50) and length (click the YouTube link to directly access chapters from the YouTube playlist: 1. Audio Interface Setup - 7:24 2. Audio Interface Options - 8:20 3. MIDI Device Setup - 8:58 4. MIDI Clock & Sync - 10:19 5. Control Surface Setup - 14:20 6. File Options - 10:08 7. Plugin Manager - 6:44 8. Instrument Definitions - 10:09 9. GUI & Track Overview - 14:48 10. The Browser - 8:58 11. Multidock & Control Bar - 11:41 12. Inspector & Control View - 7:02 13. Piano Roll View & Screensets - 10:05 14. Project, Track & Bus Templates - 14:02 15. Exploring the Track - 14:35 16. Exploring the Track (Pt.2) - 14:50 17. Exploring the Track (Pt.3) - 13:55 18. Exploring the Track (Pt.4) - 7:52 19. MIDI Synths - 13:03 20. MIDI Synths (Pt.2) - 5:47 21. Session Drummer & Drum Maps - 12:13 22. Audio Routing - 13:06 23. Working with Video - 4:02 24. Audio & MIDI Basics - 23:26 25. MIDI Advanced - 10:46 26. The Matrix - 16:15 27. Step Sequencer - 12:03 28. Editing Basics - 11:47 29. Editing Basics (Pt.2) - 11:45 30. Editing Basics (Pt.3) - 16:17 31. Editing MIDI - 11:22 32. Editing MIDI (Pt.2) - 8:50 33. Staff View - 6:22 34. Comping and V-Vocal - 17:22 - (V-Vocal not in X3) 35. Groove Loops (Clips) - 12:32 36. Working with Tempo - 10:24 37. Working with Audiosnap - 8:47 38. Working with Audiosnap (Pt.2) - 8:26 39. Working with Audiosnap (Pt.3) - 9:34 40. Working with Audiosnap (Pt.4) - 6:23 41. Console View - 9:32 42. Clean Up & Bouncing - 8:25 43. Control Groups & Gain Control - 10:24 44. Pro Channel & Side Chains - 12:56 45. Working with FX & FX Bins - 11:31 46. Working with FX Chains - 10:30 47. Working with Automation - 7:58 48. Working with Automation (Pt.2) - 10:53 49. Working with Automation (Pt.3) - 13:04 50. Exporting - 8:05
  4. That's a quality introduction, and should be required reading for anybody installing a DAW!
  5. I'm fairly certain that the Apple corporate bean counters are looking at iOS $$$ for the bottom line these days. Those iPhone thingys seem to have the world mesmerized. Apple is once again the most valuable company in the world https://www.businessinsider.com/apple-passes-microsoft-and-amazon-as-most-valuable-company-by-market-cap-2019-2
  6. From what I have read, sharing the SATA ports with m.2 is a common design feature.
  7. Interesting... If pro users flee the Mac ship, then Windows will become the legit audio platform!
  8. SynthMaster and SynthMaster One have an "audio input" mode in the oscillator section. Each also comes with a VST effects version of the plugin. so that it can be used as an insert in the Cakewalk audio track. Sort of a vocoder if you consider that you can route your audio input through the synth filters, modulators, and on-board synth FX, while bypassing the on-board synth oscillators.
  9. I'm showing CbB 2019.01 build 27 is up to date here. And I just updated BA to the latest a few days ago.
  10. Not really an oversight. Think of TTS-1 as the Cakewalk "integrated" GM solution. Handy to have that feature available by default, which includes multi-timbral support using a single instance of the plugin. I always use TTS-1 as a starting point for opening GM files in Cakewalk, then replace instruments with other plugins as needed. By comparison, Studio One uses a crude method of mapping GM sounds when you open a MIDI file there. It loads a separate instance of their Presence XT sampler into a new instrument track for every track in the GM file. Presence XT can only load one sound at a time. I believe Cubase loads HALion, based on a demo I tried once. I'm not aware of any other integrated DAW options for opening GM files, and I believe I'll just stick with Cakewalk for that.
  11. I guess that I am just hardheaded, but I keep fighting the battle against a few 3rd party plugin installers that insist on creating that Steinberg folder without asking me. And I keep deleting that folder after moving the plugin in there to my actual VST path. I have set up this folder 'C:\Program Files\VstPlugIns' to be the path for all of my 3rd party 64-bit plugins. Well behaved installers will find this path, or ask me where my VST path is located. But occasionally a plugin gets installed in a new Steinberg folder that obviously isn't in my scan path. That takes a bit of detective work, but I am onto that trick now. First place I look! Maybe your method is the path of least resistance, LOL!
  12. Making an image of a drive is usually considered to be copying all active partitions on the source drive to a backup image file container on another drive. The image is a snapshot of all contents in all of those drive partitions. When the image is restored to a physical drive it will recreate the exact same image of that drive at the time the image was made, including any boot and recovery partitions. When using disk image backups, there is no need to select individual folders, as the entire drive contents are copied to the image. Since free space is usually not copied, the image file can be smaller than the actual total capacity of the physical source drive. Imaging works very well to backup your internal drives. It is a similar process to cloning, but the image is stored in a file container on the target drive, and doesn't take up an entire physical drive as the target. Cloning is more useful when you just need to swap out to a new drive. You can usually fit several images on a target drive, depending on the capacity. The images can be restored to the original source drive, or to a replacement drive that is at least as big as the source drive.
  13. I have personally been using the policy successfully in Win 10 Pro since 2016, and have never had an update downloaded where I did not first click on "Check for updates". And to repeat what you quoted me about earlier, I am not referring to the deferral settings. It is in the group policy. You keep bringing up deferral settings, but that is not what I am talking about. And the policy still works.
  14. Cakewalk Sound Center is a 32-bit VST plugin that will work with Cakewalk by BandLab. On my system it is located at" c:\program files\cakewalk\vstplugins\cakewalk sound center\CakewalkSoundCenter.dll'. You may need to re-install the version of Sonar that included the plugin. Some of the Sound Center sound libraries are also dependent on installs for Dimension Pro and the classic Rapture. Everything needs to be in place before you install Cakewalk by BandLab, because it is dependent on previous Sonar installs for the bundled content.
  15. The Artist instrument collection requires Sonar. The best plan is to first install Sonar Platinum completely, with all of the add-ons,. Then install the new Cakewalk. That way Cakewalk should scan and pick up the plugins from the Platinum collection. Then just leave Platinum installed (do not uninstall it) and run Cakewalk.
  16. TAL Vocoder v2 is free and 64-bit. https://tal-software.com/products/tal-vocoder
  17. I got my code hidden in an email from Waves titled, "Watch: Vocal De-Essing Techniques". Had to read the email to find the hidden code for the Arturia deal, LOL!
  18. I just checked the Magix site and the upgrade to Acid Pro 8 is $99 in the cart (which is $50 off the full list price).
  19. I am a fan of Udemy for online classes. One suggestion I will make is to watch the preview videos for any course that you are considering, and maybe read the reviews and the instructor bio. There are a wide rage of instructors at Udemy, and some are excellent teachers, and very qualified, including some college professors and PhDs. Others, maybe not so much. There are a few self made, self proclaimed experts getting access to the platform. Some of them are good instructors as well. So all in all, a very diverse range of teaching qualifications. I'm not sure what screening standards are used by Udemy. But it is a notch above YouTube, LOL. Maybe even head and shoulders above!
  20. I still have the 32-bit version of Acid Pro 6 installed. Every time I think about upgrading, I open up v6 and ask myself if still I really need this. Time marches on...
  21. You have a different issue than the OP. Suggest starting your own thread with the proper title if you want it to be seen.
  22. Basically, it means to copy your critical stuff, and store it safely. Today, that probably means making disk image backups of your PC hard drives and storing them in at least two locations. Keep one copy offline locally, and a store a second copy offsite at the office, or a friend or family members home, or even at a safe deposit box. A few free backup disk image solutions are available, so the only investment needed is external USB drives. My choice is Macrium Reflect Free. https://www.macrium.com/reflectfree For Cakewalk, if you open "Preferences > Folder Locations" you will see where your stuff is located. You can set up paths to an alternate secondary hard drive, so that your stuff is not disturbed if you wipe and reinstall Windows on your primary system drive. I also archive all downloaded installer files onto a separate drive, in case the company servers ever go away. The media file content, once installed, will be in folders of wav files typically. So if you have those folders backed up you will not need those installers again. But for plugins (and their DLL files and preset folders), the original installers will be handy.
  23. That is a nice song, and those instruments are a lot better than the GM sound sets available back in the day! I have a collection of old GM songs that I occasionally like to re orchestrate with modern virtual instruments. I agree that it is good DAW practice, and lots of fun!
  24. I have over 20,000 presets for various synths stashed away in Akai VIP. Using one VIP browser I can search for certain types of sounds among that entire collection. I have another 15,000 presets for Synth1 organized in the Synth1 Librarian. Also searchable by tags. And then when the SampleTank 4 releases later this month, I will have a total of 6,000 sounds searchable in that. On second thought, I should probably break that down to my 500 favorites!
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