30 channels of plugs activated on a project or so. Also, was able to run both cores for the first time reasonably reliably since aquiring a Duende back at 07. But it does seem to beat most of them in intuitivity (is that a word?), ease of use, and speed in getting good sounds. Bus Compressor The UI is a facsimile of the centre section compressor from E and G series analogue consoles, a tool which has been eulogised as the ‘glue’ slap-it-on-the-stereo-bus quick fix compressor. UC1 features: Legendary SSL workflow and console ergonomics meets the power of SSL Native Channel Strip 2 and Bus Compressor 2 plug-ins. Plus, as a first time X-Verb user - the X-Verb doesn't seem to be requiring much more oomph from your CPU than any garden variety reverb plug available. Bus Compressor 2 expands its feature set with additional Ratio, Attack and Release options, the ability to trigger the sidechain externally, as well as x2 and x4 oversampling. Maybe these are leaner even thought they're entirely ITB.Agreed. I don't know why this would be true, and maybe it's not, but it "appears" that giant sessions which ran V3.5 (using the hardware) actually used more CPU than these native versions. I haven't opened more than 7 or 8 instances of these plugins yet but the CPU remained VERY low while handling those. Dragging in real time along the frequency grid in X-EQ was never so smooth. All settings from previous Duende sessions loaded perfectly (from what I can tell), each plugin loads quickly, and the tactile response is snappy. In the very early stages here - so far it's brilliant.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |