Quote:
Originally Posted by
jenzii
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interesting that this is the exact opposite of my experience with these daws, I wonder what's different about the systems. Logic to me seems so much better optimised and bounces 10x faster than ableton for me, while crashing a lot less. I can have up to 800 audio tracks and loads of plugins in a big logic session and rarely run into issues, whereas in ableton I had to constantly freeze stuff and freezing was so slow I almost quit music. For me + my system logic is well enough optimised, and they just need to address the small but super important things already mentioned in this thread, like snap, ara, midi comping etc
ok well firstly relieved to know I'm not the only one having issues with the snap.
that's really interesting re Ableton. I wonder if perhaps the fact I've been using Logic for over 20 years now means that my project templates have some flaws from earlier versions in them.
to give you an idea of how it compares on my system, I recently had a project that was sent to me as a 50 track Ableton file, I was able to bounce and comp at lightning speed in Ableton. when I got it into Logic every time I bounced it took between 20 mins and half an hour, which is roughly the length of the whole thing.
to be fair, a lot of stuff which is wrong only really applies when you have a nuanced workflow and so it probably isn't top of their list of priorities, that's to be expected.
I guess what's a bit disappointing about this upgrade is that it's not really an upgrade for most users, in the sense that for example I have numerous plugins that already offer generative / algorithmic drum tracks (including Logic lol), and I have more saturators than anyone would ever need in a lifetime, so I don't see so far what it's offering that is new if you factor in third party software.