danny.guitar said:
Most other software has it stored in plain view as well. You'd think there would be something out there that reads the project files and converts it to another program's format...
There are - or at least were - standards for this for this very reason. These standars are what are called "EDL formats" (EDL = Edit Decision List).
These edit list formats were originally designed so that audio and video editors could edit material at their own editing desks based upon timecode location and certain edit codes and then take the master copy of the tapes along with a copy of their EDL to a master editing suite and have their program material automatically edited and/or mixed down based upon the step-by-step timecoded instuctions in the EDL.
There are several common formats for EDL files that are shared amongest the different professional manufacturers, many of which I have listed in a previous post. These common formats allow(ed) editing instructions - what we refer to here as "sessions" or "projects" to be shared amongst different suites and studios regardless of their hardware platform. Some EDL formats were more expansive and/or more robust and extensive than others, but all in all it was a system that worked well.
Today that idea is fairly well - but not perfectly - being similarly used in the BWAV (Broadcast WAV) format as well as the OMF I believe (Benny, correct me if I am misconstruing OMF... or any of the rest of this FTM

). But as to why there has not yet been universal adoption of an EDL format in the prosumer audio field I can only guess: I think it's a combination of factors.
One of the first ones, I believe, is the "all for one/one for all" approach taken by Digidesign. A company who operates under the idea that the hardware and software for audio editing and engineering should all pretty much come from one company (with limited exceptions), and who has become a de facto majority player in the pro studio, probably finds it against their strategic interest to open up to rosetta stone formats that allow other manufacturers to come in and do the work that now can only be done on their stuff. It's about the only reaon I can think of why PT has not incorporated BWAV support yet.
Second, studio collaboration amongst the smaller players like us has only really started to mature in the past year or so. I frankly wouldn't be suprised if by the next NAMM that you saw a Steinberg or a Sony release a universal EDL specification in much the same way that Steinberg did with VST as a plugin specification a few years ago. This is where I am laying my hopes.
Third, as far as Danny's wonderful idea of a "Rosetta Stone" EDL translator, they do exist, but as has been stated before, they are not perfect for a number of technical reasons; some things juct do not translate well unless there is a common specification for some of the editing tasks and values. Then again, the old A/V EDL formats like CMX and Grass Valley were not perfect either, but they certainly worked better than nothing.
G.