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I’ve been reluctant to try adapting how I work for years. Inevitably, we develop a workflow that gets us working, and as we conform to this way of doing things, it can become increasingly more daunting to even consider trying anything else out.
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#Steinberg cubase pro 8 code
While my recording facility is primarily a Pro-Tools HD room, I was looking for a DAW that would fit nicely with the work I like to do away from the big room, mostly on a MacBook Pro - a program that would really make composing, writing, and exploring ideas easy and fun.Īll of us who regularly work with DAWs, regardless of which one we lean towards, can say there are features we love and others that we wish we could write out of the code immediately. However, as I began to think about essentially being forced to learn a new program, it seemed like the task could be worth pursuing. Years ago I was primarily working with Cubase 3, and shortly after that, Nuendo, and I always admired Steinberg’s ability to create a visually elegant and immersive user interface that still puts the primary focus on functionality and feel. The project was to take Steinberg’s Cubase Pro 8 for a serious test drive. Cubase Pro 8 is the latest version of Steinberg’s full-featured DAW.