William wrote:Better automation in Live is definitely needed.
better arrangemt
William wrote:Better automation in Live is definitely needed.
friend_kami wrote:not gonna happen until 9.
unlike other software companies, ableton waits with features the users wants until they got a big update, so they can charge for it.
which they do, each update (bugfixes not included).
so yeah, better automation tools is something we all want, but its not gonna happen until live 9.
Angstrom wrote: That process sounds like this:
fuck, shit, oh fucking hell, fucking shit, shitting, oh for fucks sake NO!, fucking ... , ah there it is .. , shit, where the fuck has it gone now??? , there, no , there, where, what/ wait WHAT? FUCK!!!
+1soundpalace wrote:Being an ex-Cubase user, I must agree that the automation in live leaves a lot to be desired!
The 2 absolute essentials that are lacking from automation are:
1) Ability to type a value for a point
2) Ability to snap the automation points
And as a nice to have, it would be great to see curves and the ability to draw shapes like sine waves automatically based on the snap setting.
Hope the Abes are onto this
anybody human wrote:I'm not expecting improved automation (and arrangement in general) to be a focus of Live 9, which would be shocking. I love Ableton but I've just accepted that the need for 2 DAW's. It's kind of ridiculous that I often feel the need to avoid detailed editing of automation in the program I use everyday. Sorry to sound negative, but the lack of such basic features drives me nuts. I've said it before, Ableton should just hire a couple people who've worked on ProTools, Logic, or Cubase and have them work on just basic DAW functions. It has to be a priority.
Angstrom wrote:probably the best thing you can say about the multilane automation in Live is "it is there"
everything else about it is not so great.
I think the issues come from the incremental way that the interface has been built up, so by the time we arrive at Live8 every function must sit on top of an old interface.
If anyone does a lot of work in Arrangement they will have experienced the shoutfrenzy that occurs as you try to navigate to a drum in a group and open up three parameters for that drum, then scale the lanes, and zoom in so you can then edit the automation.
That process sounds like this:
fuck, shit, oh fucking hell, fucking shit, shitting, oh for fucks sake NO!, fucking ... , ah there it is .. , shit, where the fuck has it gone now??? , there, no , there, where, what/ wait WHAT? FUCK!!!
seems that everything at ableton is following a very streamlined bussiness concept.. the creativity is rather in the biz concepts than in the actual sequencer concepts ..that mostly just copy other daw´s features... even the session mode with all the clip launch modes is a direct take over from opcode studio vision...Der_Makrophag wrote: Problem seems not to be that they can't do it, but don't want to. Only that way one can explain this half-functionality of things like automation curves
3phase wrote:true..Angstrom wrote: I think the issues come from the incremental way that the interface has been built up, so by the time we arrive at Live8 every function must sit on top of an old interface.
and thats not the only area where working with the program is building up language like this over the years.. you accept the drawbacks in early stages of usage but in the cause of years and years it just feels pretty sick.. especially the huge contrasts between smart implementations and overly stupid ones really hurts somehow... you have the very smart magnifying glass zoom tool for the clips.. but in arrange you collapse and open the tracks all the time by hand as a donkey... not very consistent somehow..
its really like if there would be 2 teams designing the program the a team and the b team..
but the b team gains more dominance over time... probably because the a team is engaged with fixing the b-team bugs... a classical win win situation...for the b team