Thanks for the great Video. I find it great to refresh memory when it becomes necessary. The Video & Sound Quality are great as well as the explanations tempo. Thanks!
When using crossfades for smooth transition between two audio events (like overdubbing a part of the audio to fix it) , which one is better to choose, equal gain or equal power?
@@LanewoodStudios Option one. I need to mark two events on different tracks with the range-tool and "crossfade" them at the amount marked. I also need to trim these two events (one at the beginning and one at the end) simultaneously to place the crossfade at a specific frame. This situation is common in audio post-production workflow.
@@LanewoodStudios there have been many occasions in the history of AVID for engineers to switch to another DAW. I have also seen the "scandal" around the pricing models and I don't like it either. But the hassle of learning a new software (one they've spent half a human lifetime learning) is, in my opinion, the cause of why few switch. All the associated purchased (very, very expensive) hardware doesn't make it any easier either. There are still features in PT, similar to the ones I mentioned above, that save the engineers a lot of time. In the recording area there is the full integration of DSP in PT (you work with the DSP without even noticing it). And probably the most important point: If everyone else in the industry is doing it, I have to do it too. Otherwise, I might get the impression that I'm not "pro" enough. (I'm exaggerating a bit, of course, because in certain areas it's still important to exchange PT project folders). Unlike most pros, I've been a Nuendo user since N3 and only started working with PT in college. You can't underestimate how much that influences you when you come from somewhere else. If the industry standard had always been Nuendo, I might not feel like switching to anything else either....