Totally agree. AudioDesk was sort of a lite-version of DP, often included for free in the hardware interface boxes. It was a pain in the neck. It didn't have all the features of DP, plus it always had problems of its own, bugs of its own, and never seemed to be updated as much as DP. As an ambassador for DP, it really drove people away. I was glad when they dropped that.Prime Mover wrote:Problem is, Light Editions are real investments that require constant updates along with the main line. Where-as, demos are mostly just the innitial investment of developing the usage scheme (save disabling, time limit, etc), once you have that framework complete, it's fairly simple to just tack it on to any version of the mother program as it gets updated. Demos require comparatively little effort to produce. But throw a light edition in the mix, and you can expect longer development times for DP, I don't think we want that.
I've been wanting to create some videos along those lines, and post them here. Two things prevent me: one, it takes a lot of time to make a really 1st-rate video. And two, if any of those things gets popular, that's MY bandwidth that it's eating up. They cut you off after a point, and then how am I going to download a movie (the Hollywood kind) to watch after a long day of working? I guess I could upload them to YouTube. I just haven't wanted to have a YouTube presence. Guess this is the time to think about that. Then there's still the issue of the time it takes to make a video. I've got a life, too, you know?Prime Mover wrote:The one thing that could work is a trail version that comes loaded with tutorial process bubbles. Things like step by step walkthroughs of various windows and features, and differences from traditional DAWs.
But yeah, I'm totally in agreement, video walkthrough tutorials would be a GREAT first step.
But I think we could make better videos than MOTU could. Why? Because we USE it in the way that end users do, and we know what stumps people. Just go right to the point. MOTU would feel like they had to be all-inclusive and cover everything no matter how mundane. We can zero in on little things. If we have a good indexing system, we could make a great set of tutorials.
But… it takes time. I've only made a few, and they were not good quality. I need to get so familiar with the video tools I've got that it does not intimidate me to pull them out. 90% of my time is spent trying to make sure I've done it the best way. If I could just see a potential teaching point, boot the screenshot software, and make the video, I'd get a lot more done if I knew it wasn't going to take me more than, say, 15 minutes.
Maybe if someone made us a tutorial on the BEST, FASTEST way to make a high quality video. I can tell you the first step: download ScreenFlow. Then you need the ability to hear what's happening in DP in full fidelity plus hear your voice through a microphone. I have a hard time getting both of these sources to record directly into a video app. My workaround is to put the microphone in DP, and have it monitor only DP. Then I've got to change my file, add the mic track, reconfigure the input/output hardware drivers, record the video, then go back and RE-reconfigure things back to the way they were in order to continue working. I don't know, but when I've got a fleet of VI's that take minutes to boot after a driver change, that's just not conducive to interrupting what I'm doing to make a video. If anyone has a better way, please… do tell.
Shooshie