Originally posted by Securb
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Originally posted by Mincer View Post
I've found it to be very stable in use. Once in awhile a 3rd party plugin would crash, but it won't take Waveform with it.Last edited by Securb; 06-26-2022, 08:02 AM.
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Looking at all of the files surrounding the plugin manager and VST interfaces they look very stable and are unlikely to be buggy. The "header" files which are typically in the worst shape in legacy codebases are immaculate. I am not seeing any circular dependencies. I would suspect if anyone is having issues with VST plugins crashing in Waveform it is the plugin causing problems not the DAW. I would check to see if you have the latest release of your plugins.
Last edited by Securb; 06-26-2022, 08:00 AM.
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Originally posted by Securb View PostLooking at all of the files surrounding the plugin manager and VST interfaces they look very stable and are unlikely to be buggy. The "header" files which are typically in the worst shape in legacy codebases are immaculate. I am not seeing any circular dependencies. I would suspect if anyone is having issues with VST plugins crashing in Waveform it is the plugin causing problems not the DAW. I would check to see if you have the latest release of your plugins.
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Originally posted by NegativeEase View PostI use Harrison Mixbus professionally for certain kinds of productions.
It's a super stable and great DAW
Head to Head testing, it clobbered Reaper for most things.
Even when using a plugin, the signal still passes through the channel. The trim, gain, level and EQ will all affect the tone. Even with the EQ being set the same in different DAWs, you will get different results. Like analog mixers and amps, DAWs have their own tone stacks. Every company thinks its algorithm for EQ is better, faster and smarter. This technology is copywritten and protected and not the same from DAW to DAW.
There are some DAWs that are built on the same open-source code. That is where it ends; each is unique in its own way.
I find it mind-blowing that people feel a curly guitar cord will give a drastically different sound than a straight guitar cord. However, signal processing software that is written with totally different code and different software languages sounds the same.Last edited by Securb; 06-26-2022, 04:05 PM.
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