I guess we should download more browsers until it works. As one who has more than enough sounds I can't believe I'm going through a set of hoops for a free one.
I'm an IK fanboy. I have so much of their stuff my user area takes 3 days to read. I should probably turn in my badge because I forget to use most of it. That's why I'm passing on this. So this bitch session was brought from KVR over to here. Ugh!
Wow I forgot I had this. My biggest knock against Melda is lack of tutorials. Good thing we have Chandler. You question is too logical and defies our nature of hoarding plugins.
Melda picks 4 plugins every week for 50% off. That's how I bought it. One time they have 2 of their super duper plugins for $99. I bought those from APD.
I have 80 of their plugins. When they've had their bundles sale I could've had everything for under $500.
You can install them on every machine in the house and lifetime free updates.
How the upgrade prices are computed: we subtract 70% of what you have spent so far for the products included in the upgrade. We cannot know the actual price when you purchase from a reseller, so we assume 50% off, hence it is advantageous to purchase from us directly if you plan to upgrade. Minimum upgrade price is € 10.
Good to know when you move up the Melda chain.
Their authorization is almost as flakey as XLN. I don't know how many times I've had to reauthorize. But it's not as flakey as the end user who bought and hasn't really put it to use.
I have and they tell you in the manual it is not the most resource friendly. Unfortunately when you buy Melda by 3rd party your discount for bundles is not a s great buying direct.
They are not as heavily distributed. They seem to be for the trap crowd. What is tempting about this is the amount of midi files.
https://www.adsrsounds.com/vendor/thedrumbank/
A good place to check and what is popular.
These kind of sales are a weakness for me.
Where I live there are no basements. If I did it would be like a DAW museum where I would slap together my old socket A system and use Gigastudio 2 and W2000.
It's a guess for sure. As a DAW collector I'm starting to keep track of how frequent one needs to pay up to keep up to date. Cakewalk started doing that after about Sonar 3 and I started walking away despite the only license I didn't have in my collection was Sonar 6. The popular DAWs are the ones designed for dance music workflow. When I get a softsynth or presets I audition them in Bandlab. As for value and less cost to keep up to date is FL, Bandlab, and Reaper. Plus you can't beat the flexible licensing. Studio One is another one.