Reaper...
- MichaelAlan
- tinnitus
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Reaper...
Sorry in advance, I know there's been some discussion about this software already, but who uses it, why do you like it? (Or even why do you hate it?) I have started checking it out and I'm liking it.
Mike
Mike
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- davepinkham
- gettin' sounds
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I just started using Reaper. I switched from a Linux platform with Ardour back to Windows and installed Reaper because I was tired of fighting with Ubuntu to make it work properly. I love Reaper! It is simple and intuitive to use yet can do everything I want it to do. Compared to Ardour it was a dream to figure out.
Big Reaper fan here too for the last 1.5 years.
Pretty intuitive, especially if you are used to mixing boards, great value ($50!), very flexible routing options. Also comes with some pretty powerful, if spartan looking plugins.
You should also cruise their Forum, lots of helpful people there (kind of like here!). And you can learn a lot of tricks by simply reading the posts everyday.
I think they are about to come out with a major update - version 3. Will be interesting to see how that turns out.
Pretty intuitive, especially if you are used to mixing boards, great value ($50!), very flexible routing options. Also comes with some pretty powerful, if spartan looking plugins.
You should also cruise their Forum, lots of helpful people there (kind of like here!). And you can learn a lot of tricks by simply reading the posts everyday.
I think they are about to come out with a major update - version 3. Will be interesting to see how that turns out.
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- davepinkham
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wedge wrote:Can you give more details? I've installed Ubuntu Studio and think it's great, but the audio apps aren't seeing my audio interfaces, etc., and the tech jargon is all Greek to me... What couldn't you get to work?thebells wrote:I was tired of fighting with Ubuntu to make it work properly.
i love the desktop environment, and it is fast and efficient. it was always just one problem after another. as soon as i'd get it stable, they'd issue another update that would fuck the whole thing up again. i recently finally had to reformat and tried the newest versino (intrepid ibex) and couldn't even get basic functionality. as it turns out, Pulseaudio, which is now the standard sound server for the distro, simply does not support the M-Audio Delta 1010 or any cards with the ice1712 chip.
I was able to get it going with a workaround on feisty fawn, but on the newer versions no dice. I made the switch to ubuntu specifically because I read that it was great for recording, with the possibility for near-zero latency and some kick ass open source DAWs like Ardour, but I finally realized that I had spent about 1000x more time trying to get the damn thing to work than I had recording so I kicked it.
that said, what specific problems are you having? if its something I dealt with, I'd be glad to try and give you a hand. lots of people certainly volunteered their time and knowledge to me trying to get it to work. www.ubuntuforums.org is a great support forum. there are tons of helpful and experienced people floating around that board.
- metanoiastudios
- buyin' gear
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I love Reaper. LOVE LOVE LOVE.
It's very CPU-efficient. Very intuitive in the sense that you don't depend on your mouse for everything you do. It is constantly being updated. Doesn't crash on me 1000 times like Cubase used to, AND you can use different skins for different sessions. Be sure to get a nice looking skin first, because the default one is yucky.
mvollrath, there's a new upgrade that (i think) is supposed to improve the meter's refresh rate. Maybe that solves it? never paid much attention to it, so I couldn't really tell after upgrading, but maybe you can?
It's very CPU-efficient. Very intuitive in the sense that you don't depend on your mouse for everything you do. It is constantly being updated. Doesn't crash on me 1000 times like Cubase used to, AND you can use different skins for different sessions. Be sure to get a nice looking skin first, because the default one is yucky.
mvollrath, there's a new upgrade that (i think) is supposed to improve the meter's refresh rate. Maybe that solves it? never paid much attention to it, so I couldn't really tell after upgrading, but maybe you can?
http://www.paulojuarez.com
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- ;ivlunsdystf
- ghost haunting audio students
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Try 64studio, great audio distro. I am having a problem getting ffado to compile so I can use my phonic firewire mixer (got it compiled in ubuntu, but 64studio is a little less bleeding edge but more stable), but my firepod worked perfectly out of the box. I am thinking of moving away from ubuntu now that I have a little more linux experience, just because I think the idea of it being easy to use is great for general stuff (I am using it right now) but when you are trying to do recording that extra stuff (like constant updates, gui's, etc) gets in the way.thebells wrote:wedge wrote:Can you give more details? I've installed Ubuntu Studio and think it's great, but the audio apps aren't seeing my audio interfaces, etc., and the tech jargon is all Greek to me... What couldn't you get to work?thebells wrote:I was tired of fighting with Ubuntu to make it work properly.
i love the desktop environment, and it is fast and efficient. it was always just one problem after another. as soon as i'd get it stable, they'd issue another update that would fuck the whole thing up again. i recently finally had to reformat and tried the newest versino (intrepid ibex) and couldn't even get basic functionality. as it turns out, Pulseaudio, which is now the standard sound server for the distro, simply does not support the M-Audio Delta 1010 or any cards with the ice1712 chip.
I was able to get it going with a workaround on feisty fawn, but on the newer versions no dice. I made the switch to ubuntu specifically because I read that it was great for recording, with the possibility for near-zero latency and some kick ass open source DAWs like Ardour, but I finally realized that I had spent about 1000x more time trying to get the damn thing to work than I had recording so I kicked it.
that said, what specific problems are you having? if its something I dealt with, I'd be glad to try and give you a hand. lots of people certainly volunteered their time and knowledge to me trying to get it to work. www.ubuntuforums.org is a great support forum. there are tons of helpful and experienced people floating around that board.
Now, for the real topic, reaper is great. It runs in linux too, although I am trying to give ardour a shot first because it is open source. I used reaper last night to record a folk concert, 3 hours long, and we recorded the first set (1 hour) and made 50 cd's, all of which were sold by the end of the night. Reaper can bounce directly to an iso (actually bin/cue) image with track markers based on your markers in the project, which is awesome for a situation like this. Also, there is a reascript addon (free) that lets you export a project with separate files based on regions, awesome for bouncing a live show to separate mp3's, wav, oggs, whatever, for each song, with each one already named on each region. I made a key macro that allows me to hit ctrl-shift-r and make each marker a region, very handy. Ardour is much slower in its workflow but it is a good program as I am getting to know it.
If you check the reaper forums, someone made an installer for linux that has its own wine and wineasio, very easy to do.
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- gettin' sounds
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a) You should try (and stick with) the Ubuntu Studio version. I've been using this since it first came out, and never had the slightest problems with my Delta 66 / Omni Studio. IIRC, it defaults to Pulseaudio off.thebells wrote:
i recently finally had to reformat and tried the newest versino (intrepid ibex) and couldn't even get basic functionality. as it turns out, Pulseaudio, which is now the standard sound server for the distro, simply does not support the M-Audio Delta 1010 or any cards with the ice1712 chip.
b) Stay with Hardy Heron(8.0.4.1) if you need the realtime capabilities.
"When electric currents go through
them, guitars start making sounds. So would anybody."
http://www.soundclick.com/jamesproject
them, guitars start making sounds. So would anybody."
http://www.soundclick.com/jamesproject
- davepinkham
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- alignin' 24-trk
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Reaper rules. I have used Vegas, Cubase, Pro Fools, Sonar and Logic and nothing works better for me than Reaper.
Reaper is easy to figure out, just think of how you would like it to work and it probably already does. If not email justin or post on the forum at cuckoos and you will have your wish soon enough. If you can get service like that anywhere else please let me know.
Reaper is easy to figure out, just think of how you would like it to work and it probably already does. If not email justin or post on the forum at cuckoos and you will have your wish soon enough. If you can get service like that anywhere else please let me know.
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