Yeah - I wonder if it could ever be possible to add a prefs option in Live "optimize for realtime" that allowed you to turn it off and free up some CPU - maybe maybe it could work just by adding more of the messages we get now for things like freezing tracks "this action will stop audio" - for things that we can currently do real-timeMachinesworking wrote:That, is Logics strong point, it was CPU efficient as hell when it was mac/PC, and it still is now that it's OSX only. In Logic 7 VS Live 5 it was brutal, probably not as much as that now, but Live could only get about 60% of the CPU that Logic could. It's still probably at least 20% more efficient. From what people told me, this has to do with Logic not poling the tracks with plug ins on them constantly like Live does, since it's not geared towards live performance like Live is.timothyallan wrote:This would seal the deal for me, I am constantly running out of juice on my core 2 duo 2.4ghz MBP when it comes to the end of a track in Live 8. If I can squeeze a substantial more bit of grunt out of my CPU with Logic, I'm all over it.trilo wrote:
It's a 32-bit Intel app. Runs well, and seems much better on resources. In Logic Pro 8 if I ran something complicated or a couple dozen tracks, I could occasionally find myself facing the 'overload' warning. This time around I had a few background apps running and was able to play all the demo tracks without a hitch (Lily Allen's The Fear, The Killers' Spaceman, and Santigold's You'll Find A Way Remix). The Killers track gave it a real workout, not even going past the halfway point on the CPU or HD load meter despite it being 81 tracks and me playing around in the mixer while the track played.
something I've often though might be cool would be if Ableton released a session only version of live, removing the problems that prevent session automation then you could load it up in Logic as a slave and combine it with Live's work flow
I dunno, maybe M4L will make that point redundant