Page 1 of 1
Wavelab 7...now for Mac?
Posted: Wed Mar 24, 2010 3:11 pm
by john doe by choice
Of all of the software that I always wanted to be dual platform, Wavelab is the only one that remained consistent - I always heard good things about it, even from people who weren't huge cubase fans. However, I've really gotten into soundtrack over the years, and I'm not looking at a career in audio mastering, so I have to ask if it's even worth it anymore. Even back when I probably would have bought it, it was over $500, and I've already got Soundtrack included with Final Cut, so I have to ask if something like this is even worth considering?
Anybody out there have a chance to use Soundtrack and Wavelab with enough experience to tell me why I should prefer one over the other? Keep in mind, mastering is not my focus - I do a fair amount of film score type stuff when I am working with audio, and have found a pretty good workflow for myself between Live 7 and Soundtrack.
Re: Wavelab 7...now for Mac?
Posted: Wed Mar 24, 2010 4:49 pm
by Hidden Driveways
This is awesome news. I'm not familiar with Soundtrack (I played around a little with the first version, but that's about it). I used to use Wavelab waaay back in 2003 when I was still using a PC. I will be happy to check it out in 2010 on my next Mac.
This is the kind of trend that I want to see. Long time PC-only audio software going dual platform.
Re: Wavelab 7...now for Mac?
Posted: Wed Mar 24, 2010 5:46 pm
by Hidden Driveways
Re: Wavelab 7...now for Mac?
Posted: Wed Mar 24, 2010 6:02 pm
by john doe by choice
Yeh, I saw that poor excuse for trolling mac users. I mean, even DJSynchro could do better, and he's incredibly boring/terrible at it.
Re: Wavelab 7...now for Mac?
Posted: Wed Mar 24, 2010 7:06 pm
by bynoe
At last

This is great news
Re: Wavelab 7...now for Mac?
Posted: Wed Mar 24, 2010 10:21 pm
by Tarekith
Great news indeed. If they didn't require that stupid dongle, I'd be all over this. Used to love Wavelab, it's an incredible program.
Re: Wavelab 7...now for Mac?
Posted: Thu Mar 25, 2010 8:10 am
by leedsquietman
It's one program worth having a dongle for IMO as it has very little to compare, especially on Mac (Peak has it's strengths but is not in the same league IMHO, unless you buy the top end Pro XT, which costs double). Sonic Soundblade at $1500 is about the only Mac editor to compare.
http://www.sonicstudio.com/products/sb/ ... ade01.html
Re: Wavelab 7...now for Mac?
Posted: Thu Mar 25, 2010 9:56 am
by Hermanus
I'm glad for seeing companies which finally understand cross platform.
It always lamed to pay twice for the same soft, just because it will run on another platform
Re: Wavelab 7...now for Mac?
Posted: Thu Mar 25, 2010 2:05 pm
by Tarekith
leedsquietman wrote:It's one program worth having a dongle for IMO as it has very little to compare, especially on Mac (Peak has it's strengths but is not in the same league IMHO, unless you buy the top end Pro XT, which costs double). Sonic Soundblade at $1500 is about the only Mac editor to compare.
http://www.sonicstudio.com/products/sb/ ... ade01.html
I'm waiting to see how much DDP export adds to the cost. Still amazed Wave Editor comes standard with DDP export and everyone else charges and arm and a leg for it.
Re: Wavelab 7...now for Mac?
Posted: Fri Mar 26, 2010 4:23 am
by leedsquietman
Yes, true. However, Wave editor is lacking a lot of other features and is painfully slow at converting mp3s according to Sound On Sound's review. Good value for money though.
I've read that Wavelab 7 has DDP import (can read DDP files). Not sure about export.
Many people believe Sonoris's DDP creator to be the best DDP available on the market anyway, and many say it's better and more reliable than Wave Editor and especially Peak's DDP.
http://www.sonoris.nl/catalog/ddp-creator-p-47.html
Even if you bought the DDP creator together with Wavelab 7, it should come out to less than Peak Pro XT.