U
UncleThumpy
New member
Here's the Review:
Short and sweet as I don't want to spend to much time away from my new obsessive compulsion to play with SONAR...more items will get posted as I run into them.
The platform:
This review involved a:
BX Chipset Motherboard
PIII 600E (coppermine) that was not overclocked.
392 Meg of cas3, PC100, plain Jane RAM
Two ATA-66 Drives. One for Windows ME/SONAR and one for SONAR audio data.
Windows ME Upgrade on a clean install.
nVidia Gforce2 MX Video Chip (AGP)
Echo Audio Gina24
SBLive! Value
3Com Ethernet card (Generic clone?) I'm lazy, and have never had a problem, so I leave it active.
Everything has the most recent drivers as of March 25 2001, but *NO WDM DRIVERS*. They aren't out yet for my hardware, but if the basic performace is any indicator, then SONAR /is/ improved when compared to CWPA9.03.
The install:
*Important* This really is a "1.0" product. It is /not/ "Pro Audio 10" , and the readme and the YELLOW CARD that comes in the box has stuff you /need to read/. (Like the need to uninstall FX1/2 before installing SONAR.) The RTFM/README file is very big, and contains a bunch of known issues. *READ IT FIRST!*
The Install went without a hitch. Disc in, Logo Up. Click Install. It reboots (for DirectX 8 [I didn't write down which part, and can't recall]] and then continues the install once the DirectX component is installed.
The installer was way more flexable than I've ever seen from Cakewalk. This may be due to all the extra's that came with XL.
No problems at all. Took about 7 minutes including reboot.
SONAR profiled my old CWPA install and seems to have migrated everything that I use during an average session. (I've only had it about 6 hours...) Audio profiling proceeded and I was up and running.
The Look and Feel
Beauty. Smooth. It took me about 30 minutes to find everything I usually use in the interface, and yes I actually looked at the manual in a few cases. The tutorial is good. I did keep looking for things in the wrong place, but that's /my/ fault. The "new and improved" track view is sweet sweet sweeeeet. I run 1280x1024 and it feels like I have much more real estate than before. The track zoom tools are non-intuative (they look similar to before, but act a bit differently) but again, it's just my Pro Audio-centric view. I'll get used to it.
The Basic Performance
Audio track performance is better than CWPA9.03. I got better response in the system, while paused and while in playback (!) than ever before. Drive usage seems the same (14 different audio loops playing back together gave me about 9% disk usage) but the new cakewalk effects seem much improved! All 14 tracks playing back with separate reverb settings and chorus only brought my cpu up to 18%. Playback with no effects brings cpu up to 3%. (The vector control in the track view is awesome btw, both for audio and midi.)
It looks like the folks over in Cambridge /did/ perform some more magic.
The Add On's Performace
I attempted to use Tassman. I will not be attempting to use it again till I have WDM drivers. Some monophonic patches kicked my cpu up as high as 60%, and the latency was around 300ms. I haven't had time to tweak it, but I ran Tassman's Demo as stand alone before I installed SONAR, and it was usable in realtime via midi. NOT A FAIR COMPARISON...I KNOW. But still...I'll wait for WDM drivers (Hello ECHO AUDIO!!! WTF?!?!)
I haven't even loaded disk two of teh package yet. More review finding coming over the weekend.
The Wrap Up
Hours of use: ~4.
Number of Crashes: 2. And they were /hard/. Reset button stuff, none of this CTRL-ALT-DEL.
Was it worth it? Oh yeah baby.
It looks like a major overhaul. Not just a cosmetic one. If you have PA9 or Pro suite, are happy with it and don't need DXi...wait for a few patchlevels. Being the geek that I am, I'll stay on the edge won't look back.
-L
Short and sweet as I don't want to spend to much time away from my new obsessive compulsion to play with SONAR...more items will get posted as I run into them.
The platform:
This review involved a:
BX Chipset Motherboard
PIII 600E (coppermine) that was not overclocked.
392 Meg of cas3, PC100, plain Jane RAM
Two ATA-66 Drives. One for Windows ME/SONAR and one for SONAR audio data.
Windows ME Upgrade on a clean install.
nVidia Gforce2 MX Video Chip (AGP)
Echo Audio Gina24
SBLive! Value
3Com Ethernet card (Generic clone?) I'm lazy, and have never had a problem, so I leave it active.
Everything has the most recent drivers as of March 25 2001, but *NO WDM DRIVERS*. They aren't out yet for my hardware, but if the basic performace is any indicator, then SONAR /is/ improved when compared to CWPA9.03.
The install:
*Important* This really is a "1.0" product. It is /not/ "Pro Audio 10" , and the readme and the YELLOW CARD that comes in the box has stuff you /need to read/. (Like the need to uninstall FX1/2 before installing SONAR.) The RTFM/README file is very big, and contains a bunch of known issues. *READ IT FIRST!*
The Install went without a hitch. Disc in, Logo Up. Click Install. It reboots (for DirectX 8 [I didn't write down which part, and can't recall]] and then continues the install once the DirectX component is installed.
The installer was way more flexable than I've ever seen from Cakewalk. This may be due to all the extra's that came with XL.
No problems at all. Took about 7 minutes including reboot.
SONAR profiled my old CWPA install and seems to have migrated everything that I use during an average session. (I've only had it about 6 hours...) Audio profiling proceeded and I was up and running.
The Look and Feel
Beauty. Smooth. It took me about 30 minutes to find everything I usually use in the interface, and yes I actually looked at the manual in a few cases. The tutorial is good. I did keep looking for things in the wrong place, but that's /my/ fault. The "new and improved" track view is sweet sweet sweeeeet. I run 1280x1024 and it feels like I have much more real estate than before. The track zoom tools are non-intuative (they look similar to before, but act a bit differently) but again, it's just my Pro Audio-centric view. I'll get used to it.
The Basic Performance
Audio track performance is better than CWPA9.03. I got better response in the system, while paused and while in playback (!) than ever before. Drive usage seems the same (14 different audio loops playing back together gave me about 9% disk usage) but the new cakewalk effects seem much improved! All 14 tracks playing back with separate reverb settings and chorus only brought my cpu up to 18%. Playback with no effects brings cpu up to 3%. (The vector control in the track view is awesome btw, both for audio and midi.)
It looks like the folks over in Cambridge /did/ perform some more magic.
The Add On's Performace
I attempted to use Tassman. I will not be attempting to use it again till I have WDM drivers. Some monophonic patches kicked my cpu up as high as 60%, and the latency was around 300ms. I haven't had time to tweak it, but I ran Tassman's Demo as stand alone before I installed SONAR, and it was usable in realtime via midi. NOT A FAIR COMPARISON...I KNOW. But still...I'll wait for WDM drivers (Hello ECHO AUDIO!!! WTF?!?!)
I haven't even loaded disk two of teh package yet. More review finding coming over the weekend.
The Wrap Up
Hours of use: ~4.
Number of Crashes: 2. And they were /hard/. Reset button stuff, none of this CTRL-ALT-DEL.
Was it worth it? Oh yeah baby.
It looks like a major overhaul. Not just a cosmetic one. If you have PA9 or Pro suite, are happy with it and don't need DXi...wait for a few patchlevels. Being the geek that I am, I'll stay on the edge won't look back.
-L