My, my.
PT is a standard that the industry can afford to have. If you have the money you can get as many tracks and plugins as your fancy desires.
The average home user, on the other hand, has the freedom to concider more cost effective options.
For example, PT LE's very real limitation is 32 tracks. N-track, Cubase SX, Cakewalk, and Nuendo have no such limitations. PT LE's limits were set when 32 tracks was a reasonable high end for computer hardware. Not so any more.
PT only allows 5 sends and 5 inserts per track. SX allows 8. n-track has no limits.
PT LE allows up to 16 internal busses. SX has no such limits.
PT got its "industry standard" status by using on-card DSP back when computers were way to slow to do much signal processing. Now that native systems can reasonably compete, PT is starting to face some stiff competition. Digi is hardly even trying to target the home market where it is FAR behind Cakewalk and Cubase.
And as a simple BBS courtesy, solit already stated that his system is based around the Audiophile 2496- which is incompatible with PT. So if solit want to learn how to mix, seems like something other than PT is going to be his best bet, eh?
Solit, I had forgotten about Logic. FINE program, but no longer supported or developed for PC since Apple bought it.
And for everyone else, is there a major difference between SX and Nuendo in the realm of audio production? I know Nuendo more geared towards post production for video, but is it worth the extra cost over SX for audio? Why?