I'm all for a Cakewalk Mac DAW application, personally. I just don't think it would be wise to port Sonar.
It's not technically impossible. It's just software. It just really is expensive.
I'm actually not sure why there's a hangup on it being a Sonar port. What's wrong with a Sonar-like app from the ground up... utilizing things they can, and writing in native Mac code everything else? I haven't seen their code, but I'd guess from comments by Cake employees that it's very much a Windows app, UI and underlying logic.
I think that if people knew the difficulties of porting in today's computer world (FAR more complex than 12-15 years ago), they'd RATHER have an app that's actually custom written for the OS, be it Mac or Windows, or whatever.
If Cake writes a new DAW for Mac, though, I'd at least demo it... I'd even beta-test for them.
A couple of things to remember:
Cubase has been multi-platform since before computers reached the level of complexity we're at now. They have tons of custom code that's built up over time to work with, and very likely far fewer OS libraries.
Having come to here from Cubase for both Mac and PC, I have to say that if that's the model of what you get when you go cross-platform, I don't want to EVER do it. They drop support for things all the time... years and years now... and they generally cite cost, which frankly doesn't help the argument of having the same app for both platforms, IMHO... though, I blame most of that on Steinberg's horrific management, and not the code cost.
eMagic was in the same position as Cubase when they were doing Logic... multi-platform from way back. The first thing Apple did was drop that idea. Many think it's to get you to buy a Mac, which is probably at least a little true, but I have to think that at least some of it is the cost of maintaining such a complicated app (more complicated that Sonar, IMO). Consequently, they STILL haven't fully Apple-ized it.. it's out of place in their "pro" line, and still very much looks like an emagic app... which, 3 years on, seems a bit strange. They seem to be having such trouble with maintaining it that they CHARGE for updates, $29 for one, and $49 for the other, and the app cost twice as much a Sonar in the first place.
Don't get me wrong, I've used Logic since the emagic days, starting with it on Windows actually. I love it, and use it every day, but it is behind in terms of its place in the Apple software line, by about 2 years.
One of the MANY rumors about the next version of it is that it's a complete rewrite of the app. If that actually turns out to be true, and they're particularly tight-lipped about it, it means they actually decided to drop a ton of code to start over. In my experience, that usually means that it was too complicated to maintain/extend, even on just one platform.
We're doing that at work right now, actually, with an unusually complicated bit of Java/EJB/Oracle/JDBC/JSP code. It's baked, so we're starting over.
Ableton Live is kind of like uber-project5, an yet costs $500.
I like Live as well, and might get it to pair with Logic Pro on the Mac I'm writing this from, but only because I can get it for $299 from the lite version. I'd never pay $500 for it.
Just to be clear:
I really would support a Cake Mac DAW. My point is simply that it should be a different app, not a port of Sonar, though some degree of project compatibility would be nice.
If they can make some money off it without hurting existing Sonar customers, cool.
Take care, and thanks for keeping the discussion civil (rare in this type of chat).
- zevo
post edited by inmazevo - 2007/07/28 02:23:39