abacab
By your circular logic, you will end up right back where you started from if you were to include everything you just mentioned.. The only other option instead may be to abandon 'Mixing, Arranging, Sequencing and recording' as its primary mission. That will surely upset the old timers (like me). But I fail to see how 'doing it all' can be a successful business model. There must be difficult choices ahead.
None of these suggestions 'suits my needs', whatever that is supposed to mean. I already use several tools, and am not invested in one size fits all solutions. Merely looking at this as a way for Sonar to survive market forces and avoid the potential for failure again if it doesn't seize the attention of the next generation. It will have to change to be successful, no matter how good, bad, or ugly that becomes...
It's only circular logic if you think that's why it failed the first time. I don't believe that was the reason it failed.
I don't think that we need to abandon anything really. The development of 'Mixing, Arranging, Sequencing and recording' has kind of leveled off with features, it's just about improving workflow, ease of use and stability.
I don't much demand for changes in the sequencing and arranging, ripple editing was the last big change. recording options look good a flexible. And the mixer had Aux tracks. Some options with having tracks and busses in their old folder instead of busses all together in the console view, some more flexible FX routing for parallel and multiband processing . But really I don't see any major changes needed to be up their with the other DAws as it is.
But I don't striping it back as appealing to the next generation, just the opposite. Matrix view paprticualry could be something to draw to the next generatio.
Staff veiw can't have been a case of spreading themsleves too thinly, as they didn't do anything on it for 10 year and is a function that ore dates Sonar in the Cakewalk days. It's a great tool in arranging and sequencing so only makes thoese too areas more competitive, not less. And being they have agreed a plan with Overture's developer to fix it, it seems a no brainer to me to dothat and appeal to, those who can read (translate), those who want to arrange Orachestral music, the Education Sector and those that have been asking for it to be developed for the last ten years.
Sorry if the 'suits your needs' comment came of as snide, it wasn't my intention. I just meant if the stuff you saw as needing to be trimmed back was not stuff you used.