Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 16th Apr 2008 20:09 UTC, submitted by jello
Apple Two days ago, the news that a company called Psystar was offering a Mac clone made quite some waves across the net. They were offering their Open Computer, a standard x86 machine, which they could pre-load with Mac OS X Leopard."We're not breaking any laws,", they insisted. ComputerWorld and The Guardian did some digging around, and found some discrepancies.
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RE: Software for Mac
by apoclypse on Thu 17th Apr 2008 12:48 UTC in reply to "Software for Mac"
apoclypse
Member since:
2007-02-17

I've used Reaper and no it does not blow Logic out of the water the value for money that you get out of just Logic express trumps Reaper ten fold. The Pro version takes it even further. Logic has the most value for money of any DAW I know. You are not dongled (Thanks Apple! Well, unless you count a Mac as a dongle) like you would be with other daws out there (I'm looking at you ProTools) and you get more effects, high quality instruments, Loops on a default install than any other daw on the market. Express by itself is value for money, it has all the features of its bug brother but with a more focused approach, a few missing effects and instruments and less support for commercial grade hardware. Midi is no longer crippled like in previous versions for express.

Anyway, my point is that reaper doesn't compare on any level. I've used a lot of daws Including all the cubases) and the only one that I don't feel cheated on is Logic. The only other daw I own at the moment is Live, but Logic is my primary daw of choice.

Reaper is nice because you can see that down the line they might have something, but they will still be far behind Logic, Cubase, and Sonar. Right now Reaper is just a toy, it needs to mature quite a bit before I even put it on my mac.

Edited 2008-04-17 12:49 UTC

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