Jump to content

How many users does CbB have?


Billy86

Recommended Posts

10 hours ago, Craig Anderton said:

Old reputations, deserved or not, die hard in this industry.  People talk about Studio One being "the new kid on the block," but it's 10 years old.  Some folks might think of Cakewalk as the company that made MIDI sequencers and then added audio. The "professional DAW" thing probably stems partly from guilt-by-association with Windows, which had a reputation (undeserved) of being inferior to the Mac. Also, Pro Tools got a head start in big studios because of the prevalence of the Mac, and Digidesign being the first company to really take digital tapeless recording seriously. But also, as a rule, cross-platform programs are prioritized for support, because that doubles your potential market. 

I suspect Cakewalk will continue to pick up users, to the point where people learning it won't even know that a program called "Sonar" existed :)

Indeed while its not unique to us, its particularly bad in our industry because many folks have a herd mentality to follow by recommendation rather than by exploring needs. We have had our share of problems in the past so some flak is deserved, but I still see quotes of completely out of date information from decades ago that has long since been addressed. Products with a legacy as old as Cakewalk are bound to have baggage that a newer program won’t have (although the new program will also have bugs, just different) 

The “professional” tag is downright snobbery perpetrated by biases, whether it be Mac vs PC or other factors that equate cost vs value. We’ve even had people who said we weren’t professional because for the longest time there was no copy protection. The free aspect is also a factor since free can be associated mistakenly with unsupported freeware.

The bottom line is user base demographics have been changing. Its not all about how many esoteric features you have anymore but how usable and inviting the product is and new users today have different expectations now than they did 10 years ago.

  • Like 9
  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

20 hours ago, slartabartfast said:

I wonder if developers have decided (erroneously) that people who use a free DAW will not pay gigantic prices for their plugins.

Erroneous indeed. Even adding up a half-dozen paid SONAR upgrades, my investment in the DAW has been a drop in the bucket compared to plugins and virtual instruments. And all that's a small amount compared to speakers, interfaces, multiple displays, microphones, acoustic treatments and  musical instruments. A free DAW is like a drug dealer offering the first taste for free.

  • Like 4
  • Haha 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, bitflipper said:

Erroneous indeed. Even adding up a half-dozen paid SONAR upgrades, my investment in the DAW has been a drop in the bucket compared to plugins and virtual instruments. And all that's a small amount compared to speakers, interfaces, multiple displays, microphones, acoustic treatments and  musical instruments. A free DAW is like a drug dealer offering the first taste for free.

I only have a small stash of hardware and when I started to add it up, you are so right Dave. 

Do you have any samples/first taste that you would like to share with the rest of us ;)

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Also remember that control surfaces generally don't sell all that well. Note that PreSonus went out of their way to make the ATOM controllers do out-of-the-box integration with Ableton Live, whose users are probably more oriented toward that type of controller. Maybe PreSonus would have made a beats-oriented controller that worked ONLY with Studio One, but it makes a lot more sense to have a controller that works with a program where most users are accustomed to using a controller.  With Cakewalk, another obstacle might be the response to the VS-700, which wasn't very successful.

I think the best shot for Cakewalk is when MIDI 2.0 becomes common. Then there could be a Cakewalk Profile for controllers, so any 2.0 controller could query it and adapt itself accordingly - an advantage of MIDI 2.0 having bi-directional communication among devices.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It was with some sadness that last week I finally contributed my VS-700 T-shirt to the rag pile.

At least it was put to one last musical purpose: cleaning up after my granddaughter, who'd just finished spray-painting her guitar as well as the patio table she'd used as a workspace.

  • Like 3
  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 3/8/2021 at 7:40 AM, Noel Borthwick said:

Indeed while its not unique to us, its particularly bad in our industry because many folks have a herd mentality to follow by recommendation rather than by exploring needs.

You even see that in instructional videos - "Use these five super-duper pro compressor settings for voice!" Which of course, have very little to do with YOUR voice. I can see someone using Pro Tools if their main gig is transferring audio/video files among multiple studios, but just about any other program is better as a songwriting or compositional tool. So people who follow the herd likely won't end up with what they really need. 

I think Cakewalk's biggest strength is that it does a lot of things well, so you can go deep if you want, or just hang out on the surface.

On 3/8/2021 at 7:40 AM, Noel Borthwick said:

The “professional” tag is downright snobbery perpetrated by biases, whether it be Mac vs PC or other factors that equate cost vs value.

The definition of "professional" means "relating to or connected with a profession." If any people use Cakewalk to make money on any level, then it's professional software. Case closed. 

  • Like 4
  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Craig Anderton said:

...The definition of "professional" means "relating to or connected with a profession." If any people use Cakewalk to make money on any level, then it's professional software. Case closed. 

Exactly. "Professional" does not directly imply that you are necessarily good at something, just because someone was willing to pay you to do it.

I have been a professional musician, a professional hardware engineer, a professional software engineer, and a professional teacher. In each of those roles, I knew plenty of associates - also professionals - who were flat-out sh*t at their jobs. There were others that I knelt at their feet beseeching them to bestow upon me even a little of their vast knowledge and experience. 

On the other hand, there's such a thing as the passionate amateur, someone compelled to learn everything they can about the subject of their passion. Such people aren't constrained by the narrow needs of a specific job assignment, but are free to branch out into any related field that piques their interest. I am happy to call myself an amateur mixer, and would be considerably less happy if I had to do it as a (shudder) job. 

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 3/6/2021 at 5:12 PM, John Vere said:

I don't think this is close to being possible.

In order to know, they'd have to have some mechanism(s) where each installed copy carried a unique identifier that would allow them to keep track of whether the downloaded and installed copy is continuing to be used and was ever updated. Hmm.

Oh wait, they do.

At its most crude, all BandLab need do is take note of how many updates and re-validations they get to find out how many people have continued using it past a certain time. If it phones home with every program launch like (I think) Native Instruments and Waves products, they have even better data.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Starship Krupa said:

In order to know, they'd have to have some mechanism(s) where each installed copy carried a unique identifier that would allow them to keep track of whether the downloaded and installed copy is continuing to be used and was ever updated. Hmm.

FWIW, all companies are loathe to give out any kind of sales or user figures. I know this because even if I plan to write a book about a specific product, and need to know how many people have it so I can decide if there's enough of a market to make writing a book worthwhile, it's like pulling teeth to get any kind of sales data, if I can get it at all.

The problem is that if the numbers are low, they don't want to be embarrassed. If the numbers are high, they don't want some other company saying  "Hey!! Maybe we should be doing that!!" Companies often like to be under the radar when something's successful. And they don't want anyone to know if it's not. :)

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

20 hours ago, Craig Anderton said:

If the numbers are high, they don't want some other company saying  "Hey!! Maybe we should be doing that!!"

Witness all the DAW's that were poised to eat Pro Tools' lunch once they left it out on the counter. ?

I have to hand it to the software companies that have managed to hang on to their industry leader status for decades. Who, after all, speaks today of WordStar, WordPerfect, VisiCalc, Lotus 1-2-3, dBASE? I know you remember them. Most of those names were at one time market leaders to the point where their names were synonymous with the function of the software.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 years later...

I do like the "2 years later..." tag above the exhumation! The semi-hidden, necro-thread alert.

Cakewalk remains in a very unique position in that people who have onboarded with CbB (i.e., no access to a prior product) will "eventually" be put into a position where their work can be held hostage based on current pathing.

These threads have become interesting to me more from there psychological perspective; specifically who is chiming in, what they are saying, and what is their motivations.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 3/9/2021 at 12:05 PM, pwalpwal said:

yep, it means you use it for a profession, but it ("professional" or "pro") has been hijacked by marketing, sigh...

So true. Not on the subject of making music, but years ago Gillette or Schick or some razor-maker attached the term "Pro-shave" to one of their products.  I remember thinking, wow, I'm pretty good at shaving - maybe I could go pro.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, mettelus said:

I do like the "2 years later..." tag above the exhumation! The semi-hidden, necro-thread alert.

Cakewalk remains in a very unique position in that people who have onboarded with CbB (i.e., no access to a prior product) will "eventually" be put into a position where their work can be held hostage based on current pathing.

These threads have become interesting to me more from there psychological perspective; specifically who is chiming in, what they are saying, and what is their motivations.

The cynicism in this forum never fails to amaze me. Why on earth would we or any sane company in our field want to hold users' data hostage? 
You do realize that we are one of the only DAW's whose project files can be opened in pretty much any prior version of the app? Would we do that if we wanted to hostage projects?
If someone really needed to, they could open their projects in any prior product like SONAR 8.5 and get most of the data out. We also plan to have free versions of all our apps so if users needed, they could use the free limited versions if they never owned a Cakewalk product ever.
The bigger question to ask is why anyone who cared about their music in any capacity would not want to pay a reasonable fee to support the development of a product they use.

  • Like 18
  • Thanks 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 9/11/2023 at 4:25 PM, Noel Borthwick said:

The bigger question to ask is why anyone who cared about their music in any capacity would not want to pay a reasonable fee to support the development of a product they use.

I'm glad you said this because it's exactly how I feel.

I realize there are many people on this planet who don't have a dime,  and free stuff is cool so you can mess around and make your beats and learn what it's like to use fully featured software. 

But as a musician,  making and recording music has always cost me money.  The first dollar I earned as a kid with a paper route went towards my first guitar. And on and on. And even these days I'm retired so there's not much spare money for gear and software but moneys not hard to find if you know where to look for it. So I have very little sympathy for the non musicians who think making music should be a free ride. 

It is so amazingly cheap to build a home studio now thanks to the software. And you can defiantly use this software to earn money.  So that is what I do. I use Cakewalk to make backing tracks and I go make money to pay for it. There's even a small possibility my original songs I record with Cakewalk will bare fruit someday with a small royalty check.  Simple really. 

There are a lot of options open to the folks who won't be able to afford even $10 for software. I was just researching to make a video about the end of Cakewalk and found this thread, I also noticed a whole bunch of videos with titles like " Best 10 free DAW's" .

You've got lots of time to finish all your Cakewalk projects before you are locked out.  

Or simply support the company and purchase Sonar. 

 

 

Edited by John Vere
  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

24 minutes ago, Noel Borthwick said:

We also plan to have free versions of all our apps so if users needed, they could use the free limited versions if they never owned a Cakewalk product ever.

This is the only the only part of the reply that addressed my concern. The rest sort of confirmed it (hence the cynicism).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Please sign in to comment

You will be able to leave a comment after signing in



Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...