blue wrote:mhschmieder wrote:I sure am glad I didn't buy into the Giga model.
Yea, but you have to wonder about the general direction of samplers altogether. If it wasn't for the fact that Native Instruments was licensing the Kontakt engine for romplers while also developing the full version, I would wonder about the future of Kontakt too. Hopefully they can keep that going by appealing to smaller developers who don't have the resources to build their own players. But you never know. Not long ago Giga was king.
I think the emergence of proprietary players is bad for us in the long run. It amounts to more troubleshooting, more authorizing, more learning curves and fewer choices for sample manipulation. Giga pioneered hard-disk sampling and, even though I don't use it anymore, I'm sad to see it go.
Tough call. Proprietary or open? Open samples lock you into someone else's player, which may or may not get updated to keep up with your samples or with new versions of DAWs or OS's. Mach5.2 is a "Swiss-Army Knife" of samplers, which makes it handy as an alternative for orphaned samples. (Giga, for example) But it may not provide all the controllers and connections as Giga Studio itself. I don't know that for a fact; but I'd guess that.
Proprietary formats seem the best bets for performance, but the worst bet for your investment. If a company goes belly-up, there goes your investment. No chance for recycling those libraries later, unless someone thinks it's worth buying the rights, or someone reverse-engineers the player. Chancy either way.
But I have a feeling there may be something else involved in Giga's decision: we're seeing a paradigm shift in virtual instruments, away from traditional samples and toward sample-based modelers. Those use much smaller samples and more programming to create very realistic sounds and performance controls. Examples include the recent Trumpet by Tommasini, Steinway Piano by Garritan, WIVI orchestral instruments by Wallander, Stradivari Solo Violin and Gofriller Cello by Garritan (Tommasini, actually). These threaten to bring down the big boys like East-West and Vienna unless they're also shifting to the new paradigm. Proprietary players are pretty much the necessity for some of these, though the Garritan violin and cello are hosted by Kontakt2 Player.
There are advantages and disadvantages to any combination of the above, but one has to consider the utility of samples like the original old Miroslav Vitous library, which has been functional in just about every player ever made. Sounds awful, but with a little Altiverb, it sounds a lot like an orchestra. Anyway, GigaStudio folks shouldn't feel too bad. There will always be samplers that play the Giga format. It's just that there are so many ways to lose your money in this racket.
Shooshie