• Coffee House
  • Gibson has to be nuts to not sale off Cakewalk instead of dumping it in the garbage can (p.4)
2017/11/28 17:07:54
THambrecht
The only way to earn money with SONAR is, that a little company, for example 3 or 4 freelancer would make the development and sale of SONAR. Then everything would be manageable. No monthly updates. Just a update from time to time - when its ready. And every major version for cash. No livetime, no rental system.
 
2017/11/28 17:15:47
karhide
THambrecht
The only way to earn money with SONAR is, that a little company, for example 3 or 4 freelancer would make the development and sale of SONAR. Then everything would be manageable. No monthly updates. Just a update from time to time - when its ready. And every major version for cash. No livetime, no rental system.
 


 
I think this could work but I don't think it will.  It would need someone like Noel to run it and he has been very quiet and the longer it is left the smaller the user base will become.  There will be some value in the IP but a lot of that will be in the developers heads.... 
 
 
2017/11/28 17:36:29
bdickens
I once worked for a major defense contractor. They lost a major contract for a product that was produced at the location I was at. Subsequently, they poured millions of dollars into capital improvements, then laid off half the work force and finally closed the place a year later.
2017/11/29 04:30:09
craigb
Beyond what has already been mentioned above, why sell something that was losing money?  There's an ex-employee posting over at Reddit (see link elsewhere in this forum) talking about exactly what happened.  In those posts he reveals that Cakewalk themselves were not making money.  If correct, then Gibson would have had some issues trying to sell them.  "WE" like to think it's a great product and an awesome buy for someone but, let's admit it, we're a bit biased here and not approaching the topic from a purely business decision point of view. 
2017/11/29 04:33:34
craigb
bdickens
I once worked for a major defense contractor. They lost a major contract for a product that was produced at the location I was at. Subsequently, they poured millions of dollars into capital improvements, then laid off half the work force and finally closed the place a year later.



Heh, happened to me too!  I was working for CSC across the street from Miramar Naval Airbase back in the Cold War 80's.  In our case it was a $32 million accounting system for the Navy.  They milked it for all they could then killed the project.
2017/11/29 23:11:16
sharke
pharohoknaughty
The late 80's and early 90's were critical for market share. Protools was getting the rep as a pro level tool, and the others were for weekend warriors. (I didn't agree with this reputation but it was that was going on).
 
Cakewalk was really only marketed in the United States. I remember Europeans on the forum asking to buy, but were pushed away. Eventually Roland became the agent for sales outside the US, and Roland treated the software very passively. It remained difficult to buy it in Europe.
 


In the early 90's I lived in the UK and back then, unless you were using a tracker program like ProTracker or OctaMED (which I was), or doing everything on hardware, the main two options were Cubase and Cakewalk. It seemed to me that there were far more Cubase users, but nonetheless I distinctly remember Cakewalk being on display alongside Cubase in my local music store. So they must have gotten into Europe to some degree, even if it was only Britain. 
© 2026 APG vNext Commercial Version 5.1

Use My Existing Forum Account

Use My Social Media Account