![]() ![]() Over the last few years, after adopting and designing Samplitude as the world's best DAW, I have come to notice the style of development that Magix adopts for its software. Recently I had the immense honor of being presented with the entry version of Sound Forge - Sound Forge Audio Studio 12 - very decent software!Īmong other more impressive activities that I adopt for a living, I am also a software programmer I specialize in programming software, for my own use, in C++ language. I've known Sound Forge since the time it was a product of Sonic Foundry - the first version I used was 4.5. ![]() I have Samplitude Pro X, Pro X2 and Pro X3. I am a fervent supporter of Samplitude and a few other Magix products on various forums. This is "my" experience, and may differ from yours. I am often an "instant buy" kinda guy when I see something that wows me. ![]() Honestly, I haven't seen anything so far that takes my breath away.īottom line - Considering all of the above, I can't see how it will improve my workflow or offer tools I don't already own (I have several DAWs (including Samp ProX3), all of Izotope Advanced Products, Adobe Audition CC6, etc.). My conclusions - without trying it in a real world session it is hard to comment on if it is an improvement over SF11. Workflow - I did open a few files to see how basic operations behaved, but haven't done any work with it yet. Opening the Izotope add-ons really highlights the differences. There are some improvements over 11, but it still looks dated. Opening - Somewhat slow finding and authorizing my 3rd party plugins Registration for Trial copy activation required an email from Magix (it was very quick to arrive) Downloading - painfully slow (see my post above) ![]()
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