Jimbo 88
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Re: No notation fixes!
2018/03/21 14:01:52
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Hey Mr Happy I am totally with you on your observations, but you are missing the point. GIVE the software to school children and when they grow they will want to purchase it. The kids in music programs grow to be the affluent adults who can afford things. How do I know? I've been going to school band/choir/orchestra concerts since 1997 to see my children perform. No matter where you live, rich or poor, you should attend the last school concert of the year when they say goodbye to graduating students. The kids going on to the best places ARE IN THE MUSIC PROGRAMS...no matter how privileged they where/are. Have you ever seen what it does to a child to have their original composition performed by a band/choir/orchestra? I have. Get the software in the hands of students. The world will be a better place and Sonar will financially benefit ten fold.
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chuckebaby
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Re: No notation fixes!
2018/03/21 16:20:11
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Another troubling tale is the cut backs to music programs for more present topics/classes. The music program in my children's school has made multiple cuts to their budget, teachers and classes. Being a musician myself it bothers me deeply. Most music programs were replaced by Computer programs. In order to keep up with the times, programs must be cut so new ones can develop. Evolution is a funny thing. 100 years ago it was all about reading music. 60 years ago or so electric instruments took to rise. Now the digital era has come to the front of line. When I was a kid there were many, many musicians taking lessons, learning to read music (such as myself). For the past 20 years or so, I have seen the decline in the importance of learning to read music. I have a very close friend of mine whom I grew up with and I took lessons at his fathers school (along with additional music programs in public school). My friend inherited the store after his fathers passing and he has seen this same decline in kids learning to read music. Its a sign of the times. more kids would prefer to shove their phone in their face or be the first to harvest 100 million on World of Warcraft. I really understand this whole thing because I am able to separate myself from it as an observer. I am a passionate musician who reads and writes his own music almost every day but I also understand the times have changed. More kids now a day are reaching for a loop or pre sampled sound to build their songs around and could give 2 slits about what a music note is. I don't frown upon that or shame them for that because my grandfather said the same thing to me about distorted guitars (he clamed I was hiding my mistakes with noise) and he was right. But that was/is my generation. School orchestras will probably always have a place (I hope so any way). But music as a class is at its peak of taking a back seat to other current event classes. For all of us, I hope this changes.
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marled
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Re: No notation fixes!
2018/03/21 16:29:24
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jsg I suspect Cakewalk's user base consists of a small number of people who actually read and write music, so they've probably abandoned support for those who do use the staff view. I wish I were wrong about this, but I don't think I am.
I don't think so, but nobody knows. IMHO it would be reasonable to have an opinion poll for such questions (what functionality has what value for us). There are recently so many assumptions and assertions of forum users. But no one really knows who is THE "Sonar" user!
... many years before ...
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michael diemer
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Re: No notation fixes!
2018/03/21 17:01:05
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Here we go again with the thread that just won't die. sonar isn't the only thing rising from the ashes... P.S. I have no idea what that emoticon means. Please keep staff view, if only in its current form. Many of us do find it invaluable for our work. Improving it would be fantastic, but at least keep it as is!
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The Maillard Reaction
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post edited by Splat Chat O'samplemashy - 2018/12/06 13:26:55
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chuckebaby
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Re: No notation fixes!
2018/03/21 19:31:22
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mister happy When I consider a DAW that was founded with the goal of providing good staff notation integration and then ignored the concept for decades, it seems especially frustrating. I can not help thinking about all the lost opportunity for both the DAW and its potential customers.
And a computer was founded on using a computer language (FORTRAN, Basic, BCPL). But people found an easier way (clicking on Windows). Its no different with the DAW. Why spend years learning to read music when you can click to add notes in a piano roll ? Not trying to start a debate, im just trying to point out the obvious.
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SandlinJohn
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Re: No notation fixes!
2018/03/21 19:39:41
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mister happy When I consider a DAW that was founded with the goal of providing good staff notation integration and then ignored the concept for decades, it seems especially frustrating. I can not help thinking about all the lost opportunity for both the DAW and its potential customers.
The founding versions of Cakewalk did not have notation at all. That didn't happen until Windows versions. I don't remember exactly when the "Score Editor" first showed up - probably during the Cakewalk Pro Audio days.
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sharke
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Re: No notation fixes!
2018/03/21 19:42:07
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☄ Helpfulby michael diemer 2018/03/21 19:56:38
When I started school in the 70's everyone in the class learned how to read basic music (by playing the recorder). If you were good at it and/or keen then you progressed onto bigger instruments. I remember music lessons where the teacher would hand out some sheet music of a new song we had to sing, and everyone would sing it correctly from the music first time. I'm sure there was some element of some kids following other kids, but it was definitely significant that you could pass out some sheet music to children of my era and they wouldn't have much trouble following along. I'm sure that's different now. Judging from what I've heard from public school teachers I know, many of them would have trouble reading the lyrics let alone the dots. I was lucky to have had a couple of great music teachers at school. On the one hand we had Mr Lane, a classically trained pianist whose lessons consisted of having to listen to someone like Stravinsky or Debussy and then talk about it afterwards, and Mr Cain, who had us singing Beatles songs around the piano and taught us about Reggae and Ska. I think even in the absence of formal music training, the least schools could be doing is attempting to instill some kind of music appreciation into kids. The sad truth is that it's culturally acceptable to go through life with the musical sophistication of a 10 year old. Imagine if at the age of 40 you were still reading Where's Wally and The Very Hungry Caterpillar. People would think there was something wrong with you. But apparently it's quite alright for 40 year olds to listen to teenybopper crap that they should have grown out of before puberty.
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The Maillard Reaction
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post edited by Splat Chat O'samplemashy - 2018/12/06 13:27:05
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Jimbo 88
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Re: No notation fixes!
2018/03/21 21:33:41
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mister happy
SandlinJohn ...when the "Score Editor" first showed up...
Cakewalk 3.01
Yep, that's when i jumped in. And I was so thankful I could print lead sheets from it. Cakewalk was the coolist sequencer with a 29.97Drop Frame and could lock to picture. CUTTING EDGE BABY!
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Kamikaze
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Re: No notation fixes!
2018/03/22 00:55:00
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Yesterday one of my 7 year olds showed me her music book. Strangely in French and Vietnamese. Had all the classics, When the Saints, Frere Jaques, Auld Lang Syne. Kids are still learning to read music. Drive past the keyboard shops here at 18:00 and you'll see a class being run with abut 10 keyboards being played at once. Meng's a classically trained pianist according to Noel, so the importance won't be lost on him. Also BandLab was Namm's Educational Software of 2018, so software for music education isn't lost on him either. I really hope they return to Overture's developer and revisit their previous arrangement.
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ptheisen
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Re: No notation fixes!
2018/03/22 01:31:50
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Kamikaze I really hope they return to Overture's developer and revisit their previous arrangement.
+1000
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Brando
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Re: No notation fixes!
2018/03/22 01:54:28
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Yes, agree on the Sonic Scores/Overture partnership.
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cparmerlee
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Re: No notation fixes!
2018/03/22 02:01:18
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Bandlab's modus operandi so far has been to acquire companies. Perhaps that will be the ultimate solution. There is no inherent reason why the notation function must be embedded in the DAW. But with the collection of functions that Bandlab is crafting, one would think that there should be a notation capability somewhere in that collection.
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Jimbo 88
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Re: No notation fixes!
2018/03/22 02:58:37
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cparmerlee There is no inherent reason why the notation function must be embedded in the DAW.
I respectfully disagree...the notation function was there long before audio functions. I've been making the case for years that notation was there before the DAW and notation will still be around after the DAW is gone. Staying current with Notation would insure the software would always be current and have a market...thus more profitable. Can I get an AMEN!
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SandlinJohn
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Re: No notation fixes!
2018/03/22 03:10:31
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Jimbo 88 I respectfully disagree...the notation function was there long before audio functions. I've been making the case for years that notation was there before the DAW and notation will still be around after the DAW is gone. Staying current with Notation would insure the software would always be current and have a market...thus more profitable. Can I get an AMEN!
I think if an external Notation tool could read Cakewalk project files - the MIDI and notation relevant portions anyway - I'd be good with that. There are a lot of good notation packages available already, we just need a project import function in one of them (or proper export from our DAW to the current MusicXML).
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cparmerlee
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Re: No notation fixes!
2018/03/22 03:33:07
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Jimbo 88
cparmerlee There is no inherent reason why the notation function must be embedded in the DAW.
I respectfully disagree...the notation function was there long before audio functions. I've been making the case for years that notation was there before the DAW and notation will still be around after the DAW is gone. Staying current with Notation would insure the software would always be current and have a market...thus more profitable. Can I get an AMEN!
It makes no difference where the function is in code. What matters is how seamless it is to the user. There is no reason a separate notation package cannot be highly seamless with the DAW. After all, this is the kind of thing Rewire has done over the years. Presonus is going that route and it seems to have some merit, although much higher integration is needed in that case.
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Kamikaze
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Re: No notation fixes!
2018/03/22 04:56:35
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Melodyne has proved that audio isn't an inherent feature of a DAW too. Just use ARA to to integrate it seamlessly.
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marled
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Re: No notation fixes!
2018/03/22 09:09:00
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cparmerlee
Jimbo 88
cparmerlee There is no inherent reason why the notation function must be embedded in the DAW.
I respectfully disagree...the notation function was there long before audio functions. I've been making the case for years that notation was there before the DAW and notation will still be around after the DAW is gone. Staying current with Notation would insure the software would always be current and have a market...thus more profitable. Can I get an AMEN!
It makes no difference where the function is in code. What matters is how seamless it is to the user. There is no reason a separate notation package cannot be highly seamless with the DAW. After all, this is the kind of thing Rewire has done over the years. Presonus is going that route and it seems to have some merit, although much higher integration is needed in that case.
Sorry, but I do not at all agree to this! As long as you think of a simple notation paralleled to the MIDI note values there is no problem (only the MIDI has to be saved). As soon as the user makes changes to the notation by hand not reflected in the MIDI data (short duration values, bindings, heavy swing, ...), these changes have to be saved. Thus it is more complicated to synchronize saving when the function is not integrated!
... many years before ...
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tobiaslindahl
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Re: No notation fixes!
2018/03/22 09:22:39
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ptheisen
Kamikaze I really hope they return to Overture's developer and revisit their previous arrangement.
+1000
I would love to see that as well. It is the missing piece in Sonar for me.
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mudgel
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Re: No notation fixes!
2018/03/22 10:04:41
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Maybe with the “Sonar” reboot there will be renewed discussion with the chap who previously offered to have his notation app included in software. I even bought it but I’m not at my PC and can’t remember what it was called.
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juan47
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Re: No notation fixes!
2018/03/22 10:28:56
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I wish the notation was more precise and easier to use. I usually write in Overture (a previous version was part of Cakewalk many years ago) then import in to Sonar for mixing.
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holmesdon
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Re: No notation fixes!
2018/03/22 10:55:36
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I would love to see a good notation feature also. I start out in the last version of Master Tracks from 2005, then export the midi into Sonar. But if Sonar is going to be subscription, then it doesn't matter, I won't go for it.
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cparmerlee
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Re: No notation fixes!
2018/03/22 14:07:56
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marled
cparmerlee
Jimbo 88
cparmerlee There is no inherent reason why the notation function must be embedded in the DAW.
I respectfully disagree...the notation function was there long before audio functions. I've been making the case for years that notation was there before the DAW and notation will still be around after the DAW is gone. Staying current with Notation would insure the software would always be current and have a market...thus more profitable. Can I get an AMEN!
It makes no difference where the function is in code. What matters is how seamless it is to the user. There is no reason a separate notation package cannot be highly seamless with the DAW. After all, this is the kind of thing Rewire has done over the years. Presonus is going that route and it seems to have some merit, although much higher integration is needed in that case.
Sorry, but I do not at all agree to this! As long as you think of a simple notation paralleled to the MIDI note values there is no problem (only the MIDI has to be saved). As soon as the user makes changes to the notation by hand not reflected in the MIDI data (short duration values, bindings, heavy swing, ...), these changes have to be saved. Thus it is more complicated to synchronize saving when the function is not integrated!
It seems to me that Bandlab might have a motivation to have a notation module that would work with ALL of their tools, not just the back-end DAW. Yes, synchronization is part of the challenge.
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michael diemer
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Re: No notation fixes!
2018/03/22 16:36:53
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Darn, just deleted my own post again, as I was editing it. Gotta stop doing that. Anyway, My hope is that whatever notation is included in the software, that it be seamless. Right now, I make revisions in staff view, and that's it, they are immediately reflected in the midi. I work on my piece in Sonar, then export the midi to Notion, to do an actual score. (Yes, I work backwards. I need the superior sound of a DAW to help with my orchestration. The sound in notation software is just not good enough). So, either keep but improve Staff View (possibly a Herculean task); or integrate another notation software. But make it seamless! Not too tall an order, right? ( )
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cparmerlee
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Re: No notation fixes!
2018/03/22 17:17:42
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michael diemer Right now, I make revisions in staff view, and that's it, they are immediately reflected in the midi. I work on my piece in Sonar, then export the midi to Notion, to do an actual score... So, either keep but improve Staff View (possibly a Herculean task); or integrate another notation software. But make it seamless! Not too tall an order, right? ()
Yes, I agree 100%. Changes made in one place should immediately be reflected in the other views, regardless whether it is one product or two. Synchronizing two products is probably (initially) harder than coding it all in one place. But I think the modular approach is the better long-term strategy, as it gives the other tools in the Bandlab kit access to the notation functions as well. We have already seen that tools like Melodyne can do a decent job of converting (some) audio to MIDI. It is only one step farther to show those audio files as music notation. Of course there are many ambiguities in such a system, but that doesn't make it impossible. It just means that some notes might not be editable of they cannot be reliably recognized from the audio. And another problem inherent in bridging these two worlds is quantification. You need to allow the music to be a little imprecise while the notation needs tight quantization, so it may be necessary to maintain two sets of start-stop values for each note. Some products do this already. I firmly believe that is is utterly pointless to try to make SONAR the "Best of the 2005-style DAWs". That war has already been fought and lost. The future will be won by the products that can reach deeper into the ENTIRE process of making music, and that includes the creative (songwriting tools) and the more prosaic (notation). I don't want to leave any impression that I think any of this is trivial. It is not. But things like Melodyne, Band In A Box, Izotope RX and the like are hardly trivial. If there was a central failing of SONAR, it was a lack of sufficient ambition.
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Muzock
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Re: No notation fixes!
2018/03/22 18:56:22
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I can live with all the bugs in the staff view. With all those years I work with it I have learn my own way to get away from the problems going on. But, it have to stay at least like that or better. It's not that I like it, it's that I need it. Sometimes, I can get into the PR or Event list but 99% of the time I use the staff view and the metronome. I rarely quantize anything but, I use the staff and the mouse. Right clic on the notes and place it the way I want. One bug that I would like to see go is the one on lower notes, I cannot do a right clic so I have to move the notes higher to fix it. TY
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cparmerlee
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Re: No notation fixes!
2018/03/22 19:09:18
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Muzock I can live with all the bugs in the staff view. With all those years I work with it I have learn my own way to get away from the problems going on. But, it have to stay at least like that or better. It's not that I like it, it's that I need it. Sometimes, I can get into the PR or Event list but 99% of the time I use the staff view and the metronome. I rarely quantize anything but, I use the staff and the mouse. Right clic on the notes and place it the way I want. One bug that I would like to see go is the one on lower notes, I cannot do a right clic so I have to move the notes higher to fix it.
Sorry, I cannot get with an attitude that "a certain level of bugs are expected and acceptable for the long term." That is just wrong. Yes, some bugs will inevitably happen, but any software that depends on users to accept workflow changes for years on end to avoid the bugs is crap. Just plain crap. No software that employs such an attitude will be successful as long as there is good competition. The only software I tolerate having such bugs is Band in a Box because it is a one-of-a-kind product with no competition.
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pbognar
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Re: No notation fixes!
2018/03/22 23:16:42
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Where have you gone, Don-o Williams Our forum turns its lonely eyes to you Wu wu wu What's that you say, Mr. Hendershott Dancing Don has left and gone away Hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey
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SandlinJohn
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Re: No notation fixes!
2018/03/23 15:19:05
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mister happy
SandlinJohn ...when the "Score Editor" first showed up...
Cakewalk 3.01
I'm guessing this was Cakewalk Professional 3.01 For Windows? The DOS version of Cakewalk 5.0 - I still a copy of have (and just installed to "DOSBOX") - does not have notation display or editing. The program runs as an MS-DOS program and does not use a graphics mode. But I've seen web pages showing the Score/Notation editor in Cakewalk Professional for Windows from around roughly the same time frame. I don't have copies of the first few Windows versions to look at, though. I was strictly an MS-DOS guy back then and then OS/2 for a while - which Cakewalk (for DOS) still worked under. I did have a Windows 98 setup (probably in 1999 - It was Windows 98 SE), which would have been just right for the early Cakewalk Professional for Windows. I started using Windows versions of Cakewalk in 2000, first with Cakewalk Express (version 8) and then Music Creator later in 2000. Those definitely had staff view and editiing.
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