dewdman42 wrote: ↑Tue Oct 29, 2024 11:18 am
I'm sorta for it and sort of against it. I mean I am willing to pay something every year. But I would prefer that they have us pay on delivery, not in advance. I don't like subscription plans because the customer pays in advance and the developer does whatever they feel like. I'd rather have them release a few version every year and charge me $100 a year or whatever and if I like what they did I will pay for it. Make it $150 if you want, fine.
Probably in most cases I will. You're right that the feature wars are mostly over...sort of. i mean dp has fallen out of favor lately, and they are behind the curve on a few things like mixing atmos and other things that the other DAW's have made numerous releases since DP11 can out even, and are way ahead on. DP's release cycle is very slow. With less and less people using it, they will get less revenue and they will then be unable to continue aggressively supporting it as seems to be more the case with some other DAW's in comparison. It's a vicious cycle. Dp still has some compelling features that none of the others have...and as small but loyal devoted user group that loves those features and loves dp, but there is a huge audience out there that DP is missing the boat on and they do need to seriously upgrade the app in certain ways to try to capture that market share...or else eventually it will die on the vine completely which would be super sad. Doing a subscription of it I feel will only keep the user base small and it will not grow, it will maintain status quo and try to fix the problems..so that small user group will at least keep it running, but the business model for MOTU is not gonna work very well unless they massively increase their user base...which means they need to bring certain new buzzy features for sure...and something that will cause a large number of Cubase, Logic, S1 and Reaper users to consider cross grading to DP. that kind fo stuff I am not in favor of funding development by paying in advance. They need to develop it and sell me on it, then I'll pay for it if I like what they did. that process is what keeps their marketing dept busy figuring out what it is the market actually wants and developing that, rather then developing whatever they feel like doing with the subscription money they got ahead of time.
Capturing market share does matter to us too, as devoted users. I may not seem like it, but the more market share they have, the more resources they can allocate to keeping the product going, fixing problems and everything else. Having market share it's important for devote dp users also. I think it's a mistake to relegate it to relatively smaller number of users and paying a subscription to keep it going, like Sibelius for example which is doomed to die eventually. DP needs to stay relevant to the mass market...which means it needs to compete with new features too.
You make the points I made then forgot to hit send on and got deleted in my browser, well.

Subscriptions like what Presonus Studio One and Bitwig are decent, but the issue is you pay for features before they come out without knowing what they will be, or you stay behind in upgrades until you get features that you want. Currently with Bitwig I'm at 5.1 because it introduced a crap browser that is worse than what it replaced, and it IMO encourages Bitwig to prioritize plugin development over arranger features and deep changes to the way Bitwig works, and that's evident with the amount of new plugins Bitwig gets yearly.
I'm not sure what DP's direction is in terms of new users? I think they made a concerted effort with Clips and I don't know what MOTU think of the response to it is? I really like DP but the UX needs work, there is lots of room for improvement in the way commands are presented to the users, and overall workflow in DP. The fact is a DAW can survive on around 20k users, especially if the developers are also working on drivers and software for audio interfaces etc.
I think personally solidifying DP in general is the major hope I have for DP12. Things like plugin sandboxing, not having preference files be corruptible, making sure that the Windows versions reputation as less stable is a thing of the past (Cubase did it), giving options for a setup file that holds all your preferences like what Reaper does.
Shoring up parts of DP that are just big WTF moments like not being able to drag a looped clip in the Tracks window, Clips are not visible in the Drum editor, and our personal favorite the lack of track or plugin automation in V-Racked plugins.
I get they need to do Atmos, but I really think overhauling what they have is where I would love to see it go, because besides AI drummers etc, they have the bases covered, just not that great. I don't think any of us think the Content Bowser is that great, it's main decent thing is Clippings but the fact you can't directly adjust the preview volume of audio being previewed in the Content Bowser or Soundbites, and that audio with tempo data does not play back locked to tempo is far behind the times, sxome parts of the Content Browser do absolutely nothing, you can't drag a preset from it into a plugin, it just shows you the preset without doing anything at all constructive, little improvements to the Drum editor would make it much more useable, etc. etc.
In general things in DP should not take three plus steps to do, I get that it's a do all DAW so it's complicated, but some things are left just too buried to be useful or unchanged for too long, I liked the overall UX changes in version 7, that was a huge breath of fresh air, and got me 100% back in DP, I think they need that sort of interface overhaul again.
I'll say this as well, I know I don't run an audio software company, but the model of $500 up front for a DAW that is not Pro Tools has mostly disappeared. Most DAWs can be had for half that, and I think it would do them well to halve that amount. Upgrades are where an older company like MOTU is going to get money for DP, there isn't a flood of users coming in, and making the entry price at Pro Tools, Live Suite level is wishful thinking IMO. The Competitive upgrade is $395... I think if a company did the modern subscription plans like Bitwig and did not have a high initial price they would do very well. Say it was always $125 a year for the latest version, you always got to keep whatever version you landed on and the initial price was $200. I think that DAW would do very well. For instance right now DP11 is at 3 years 4 months. That would be $375 from the audience that wanted every upgrade, and smaller amounts from people that wait for more features etc. it works out to more that the $195 DP12 will likely cost.
M2 Studio Ultra, RME Babyface FS, Slate Raven Mti2, NI SL88 MKII, Linnstrument, MPC Live II, Launchpad MK3. Hundreds of plug ins.