I agree with pisces7378. I will stay with my Logic version and continue working with my music. Logic still offers more features than I need. Would you change your well working analogue recorder if the company manufacturing it got broke, not me.
In the late 80:s I worked with an early version of Cubase on an Atari, it still works great even if I seldom use it today.
There are so many PC/Logic users out there. I would not be surprised if the development will continue in some way, or otherwise other brands will take care of all those users, maybe by supplying import possabilities of Logic files into their products. Would not be surprised if some 3:rd party company manages this, or why not Steinberg. This is a great chance for them.
One thing that would surprise me though is if all users starts bying expensive Macs. Don't think it will happen.
I will stay with my gear and see what happens. If the future turns out looking to dark in a year or so I'll have a deeper look at Cubase SX or Nuendo which really looks great in my eyes.
Guess the Mac/Logic users will be a small number of exclusive users (to small to create a standard) in the end and the PC/Logic users will still be there or converting to other PC software (read Steinberg), and at the same time the Mac people will turn to PC because of the small number of Mac users and for compability.
The industry standard is not Mac anymore. In a year (or at the moment) the computers are more than powerful enough to accomplish what you're after. The price issue between Mac and PC will be a hard thing for Apple to survive. If I was the head of Apple I would start making the MacOS working on a PC (I'm shure this will happen).
The support and knowledge of Logic will still be out there, even more I guess by pissed off PC/Logic users with lots of money and effort invested. Apple will be the dragon here.
Hans
www.hagen.nu