hoffman2k wrote:...a bug that Ableton no doubt is working on.
If I had a dollar every time I heard that, I could probably afford to buy project5 right now.
That being said, I'm also obviously not going to switch, but I do think ableton needs to reconsider their pricing situation. Unfortunately, I don't think that the announcement of project5 will be that wake-up call, simply because it can't provide the same capabilities that Live can. It could probably take a bit of marketshare away from the ever-dwindling cubase userbase, as well as a few of the other big-player sequencers in the windows world, but it's definitely not about to fill Live's shoes.
There was another big, flamey thread here awhile back about this where someone suggested that sampler and operator should have been included with Live6 instead of extra upgrades. The more I thought about this statement, the more I started to come around to this opinion myself.
Live is a great piece of software, but you have to remember that it does basically
nothing out of the box as far as actually generating sound goes (aside from sound content provided in the tutorials). Live's throwing the party, but you have to bring your own samples, your own instruments, etc. The exception to this is if you want to buy the EIC/operator/sampler upgrades, which basically means spending as much money as you would for something like Logic Pro, but getting a fraction of the instruments, sound content, and tools. I'm not suggesting that Live should be an all-in-one platform, as people are going to be using plenty of 3rd-party plugins and sound content anyways, but again, it's the investment vs. return ratio here.
That being said, I
don't think that the Abes should lower their prices. Instead, they should be packing in more tools to make it a more appealing investment.