James Steele wrote:Here we go again. For the sake of everybody reading this, it might be good to let people know that as far as I recall you record snapshot of every single parameter of every single plug-in whether or not that parameter changes. Sort of a "brute force" approach, as I recall. This instead of determining which parameters of the plug in are going to change and automating just those. I mean, I hate to say it, but you're sort of the extreme case here. Maybe you need to get it overwith and switch to ProTools. Not sure if MOTU is going to be able to track down the problem because of a workflow that you employ that I would suspect is used be less than one percent of DP users out there? Also, I don't the the "ProTools is meant for mixing" sentiment you told us you hear is necessarily because these people were employing the same "brute force" automation approach you use in DP and became frustrated, but that's just sort of become the conventional wisdom. There are many people making excellent mixes in DP every day, but there's no disputing that ProTools has established themselves at the big name, and if you don't want to look dumb or have people look at you funny, you just repeat what everybody else repeats.
But really man... there comes a point where if DP is just holding you back so much... move on. Life is short. Make you're music. We'll throw a little party for you in the break room and wish you well. I know Doris will be bummed as she's been harboring a crush for years, but she'll get over it. I think she's sweet on MLC as well.

James Steele wrote:Here we go again.
It's not really "again". It's after a whole gamut of system tests, on a new comp, through all permutations. I would think this info would be valuable.
James Steele wrote:I recall you record snapshot of every single parameter of every single plug-in whether or not that parameter changes. Sort of a "brute force" approach
I don't automate crazy plugs like Ozone. I will add something VERY important here. It is DP's fault that I have to create automation anchors before every major section of a song because of its terrible automation Ramping design. If I don't create an anchor of automation before a chorus, subsequent pastes result in terrible automation drifting. As far as "brute force", I could automate ONE parameter and it would still ramp, then what? You try it James. Automate 1 parameter, then past a chorus where the parameter is a different level. Watch the ramp for 24 bars. I think the only reason I get flack here is because MOTU doesn't fix things so it seems like I go on incessantly. How about we require DP to actually read its automation correctly instead of making me a one off outlier? Or we have MOTU design DP so that one can paste sections around without ruining earlier or later data, something that has nothing to do with how I work in particular. By the way, James, blaming my work habits at all for this would be technically inaccurate . It is ALL Dp. I will tell you why. Amidst ALL of these tests, me and my technician have been monitoring CPU usage very closely. Why? because there is also a slow graphics issue which is a known problem with the folks at DP, with graphics especially slow in DP 8. And, when watching CPU resources etc, you find out that DP chokes because of its own software inadequacies. There is tons of headroom on my comp. Tons of unused RAM, yet DP chokes graphically, and in other ways (they are supposedly fixing that very graphics issue soon). So I am not taxing the computer at all in many cases. Its just plain inefficiency or Dp getting in its own way, with the computer sitting at 50% or less at times. And please remember the fact that automation did NOT fail in 8.07 and earlier versions. So? Should a song play properly in an older version and choke more in a newer version with the CPU having plenty of headroom left? That's me being difficult as an outlier? If DP wasn't meant to read the automation I write, it would never have worked at all. Yet it read automation properly for MANY years, and then suddenly does not. We can argue about MOTUs priorities to bringing in youngsters who like to loop. Sure, maybe automation isn't a priority compared to keeping up with looping rappers etc. But to blame me for my point of view and not blame MOTU for having automation go backwards in capability? Really?
As far as Pro tools, my and my partner seriously considered it before recently adding a B room. But I have too many songs that need stems, stingers and alt mixes for our publishers so we are already down the rabbit hole. Perhaps Pro Tools in the future, for sure. But to me, since 8.07 was working, I assumed it wouldn't go backwards....So we installed a 2nd Dp system. Isn't that supposed to be a good thing?
You know man, I like DP other than these dumb issues. I really don't want to go back to Pro Tools. But I might for sure. But if I were to go to Pro Tools and have everyone here happy about it, I;d ask why everyone was cool with DP losing the functionality it formerly had. Makes no sense.
As far as people maybe excellent mixes every day on DP, well, depends on who you ask. A lot of the film guys make stems and have others mix. Or the stems are mock ups that get replaced so that they aren't making world class mixes themselves. A lot of music guys also stem out to Pro Tools. The difference between 80% mixed and 100% master is a chasm. I don't see DP as a recording standard anywhere in the mixing world, and I think these inefficiencies are why, and they hurt all of us here. If that's ok with people I sure don't understand it. Because DP could beat Pro Tools in so many areas. But I would disagree that a lot of people REALLY mix hard in DP. I do because I am meticulous and my own mixing is too wrapped around the production to separate easily.
So to summarize- Get rid of the terribly designed ramping, and have DP properly read automation. I don't think requesting these two things makes me an outlier at all. And maybe, if DP can read automation to the level a given computer has headroom for, AND learn to play well with 3rd party products, it could one day become a standard in the studio world instead of losing market share year by year. Hate to be mean, but I see DP becoming obscure more than becoming ubiquitous.