dave999z wrote:LOFA wrote:Another thing that will piss me off is if Logic miraculously gets released as a universal binary early, probably the day the intel towers are announced. I know Apple made intel machines available to developers, but the big advantage Apple has is it knows exactly when all the intel machines will be released, price points, etc (i.e., when the user base will actually transition). There is something anticompetitive about that. Can't fault Ableton for not allocating its limited programming resources to getting a universal binary ready by today so the one person with an intel mac can run live. The moving target that is OS X is kind of ridiculous. Developer tweaks an app to get it to run on 10.x.9, then Apple releases 10.y.1, which breaks all software (except Logic is updated that same day to keep working). It's crap I say. Crap!
OK I'm done venting. It's just another frustrating Apple transition. At least maybe this time it will lead to affordable machines that perform.
Arrgghhh!
Dave
All devs had the opportunity to buy (or rent really) an Intel dev kit for $999 last year. They've been asked to send those dev kits back now but supposedly receive a free Intel Mac as a replacement. I'm sure the Abes have one (or had).
Universal Binary Logic (along with the rest of the Apple pro apps) is being released by the end of March. Apple as a software company HAS to have their software ready pretty quick for any new hardware they may be releasing. It only makes sense for them as a company. It's not anticompetitive. Their just putting their resources there to keep the 'unified' Apple experience going.
I don't think its an issue of Logic miraculously being released on the same day as the towers, etc because they have secret knowledge that Ableton doesn't. Apple actually made some specific hints to devs about getting their binaries done. I remember seeing one at the beginning of December that sorta went...
"Have your Universal Binaries ready NOW!!!"
If that's not a hint that the new macs might be coming sooner than later, I don't know what is.
Also remember that all these developers have different priorities when it comes to their own internal schedules and upcoming updates. Ableton has to now code for 3 platforms - Windows, OSX PPC, and OSX Intel. Not to say that the Intel Binary is not important for them (I'm sure it is) but they only have so many programmers, and they also have to keep up normal development of Live (fixing bugs, listening to suggestions from users, etc.). I don't think Logic has any more of an advantage other than their not programming for Windows, so they have only OSX to worry about all day. Logic 7 was released in Sept of 2004, and 7.1 sometime last year? It seems that they're spending a lot of time working on things maybe we can't see yet - Universal Binaries? Maybe more under the hood... Where Ableton has had steady releases where you can see a very clear track of development.
Again, it's all about each individual developers' internal timetable. I'm not a developer myself, but I like to frequent the Apple developer forums, and watch their developer keynotes. Apple and OSX is definitely a moving target, which sucks on one hand, but ultimately some very cool things come out of it.
There should definitely be a lot of answers at NAMM.