Thread: DAW discussions
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Old 26.03.2013, 06:54 AM
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Berni Berni is offline
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Originally Posted by MBTC View Post
Yeah, once I play around with arrangement view more, it definitely feels easier to get used to. One thing I will say about Live, if dealing with limited screen space (i.e. gigging on a laptop for example), the UI layout feels better designed for that. I need lots of pixels and I think Cubase works well on a big/dual monitor(s), but it tends to rely more on separate windows like FLStudio than Ableton which keeps things docked and tidy. For my (existing) workflow, the big screen approach works best. Maybe that will change in the future... I can see how the screen space usage is important for those on the go.

One thing that made it kind of an unfair contest -- my Ableton version is "lite", which means it is not time limited but came with very limited (i.e. crappy) instruments. Cubase on the other hand is a trial (only 30 days), but fully functional, and it's got some killer instruments and tools.

One thing that sucks is Cubase seems to release new versions often and they're going to ding me on the upgrades -- hope they're worth it. That's one thing about FLStudio... pay once and that's it... forever, unless you want to buy more of their plugins (some of which are good). I bought it many versions ago around 2007 yet still run the latest version. From what I can tell Ableton doesn't upgrade or ding as often, which I think is a good thing.
You can use one (session) or the other (arrangement) or both, they are not mutually exclusive. Once you get your head around the idea you realise what a really creative tool live is...& then you get into the routing possibilities...
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