But I can't load it in to my existing projects. If I open a brand new project with nothing in it, I can then load in Sample X V3 and it works. Now I'm back with build 469 and my projects load and work again.Īlso, in build 469 I tried to load in the plugin BeatSkillz Sample X v3 trial into these existing projects and every time it causes Mixcraft to crash, auto save and then shut down. I couldn't find out how to do a rollback from 470 to 469, so I did a system restore. If I start a new project all is fine, but the two projects I worked on using the previous builds will absolutely not open in build 470. The other project gets to about 1% on the load bar and just hangs. One project gets to about 60% on the load bar, plugin windows start appearing on the screen, then it just shuts down and disappears. Both have a lot in them - audio tracks, MIDI tracks and a good number of plugins. Two of my previous projects will now not load. Updated version was installed and confirmed to be build 470. I saw the information regarding the improved VST3 support with build 470 (I was running build 469), so I updated Mixcraft from within the DAW (Clicked "Help" > "Check for Updates" > "Would you like to install updates?" > "Yes". But I am having trouble getting build 470 to work with existing projects and also have issues trying to get a plugin to load into an existing project both in build 469 and 470. Enjoyed the video, nice job.Been using Mixcraft happily for a few years now, and generally never had a need to ask for help. I use Sam on one computerfor creating, send those tracks over to my Studio 7 computer. The virtual instruments are pretty awesome. It also has other big pluses for creating that I haven’t seen on other DAWs. I’m not a midi type of person, lol, but find Samplitude makes midi editing, dragging and dropping samples/loops straight from CD easy. One review I think might be helpful to some out there would be Samplitude. Liked your review, it was pretty unbiased and Im sure a lot of people looking for a DAW helpful. I can always go to the manual which is well laid out and pretty much covers everything. Not that I want to read the whole thing, but once in a while I’ll have a question, or want to do something a certain way. Now as far as the manual, I think it’s great. Lets say, once I’m satisfied with the track or tracks and I’n ready to mix down, I don’t really need to see the wave-form. Freezing tracks, cutting the graphics down. But I manage by mixing certain instruments or groups of instrument to subgroups. Too many tracks can push the CPU to the limits. Both operate smoothly without freezing up or other glitches but very rarely. As far as FX, VST’s, and features, the 7 wins. The one advantage Reaper has, at least on my computer is that the Reaper is not as hard on my CPU. I’ve owned the Pro Studio 7 for some time now.
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