OP:
The current 'touch' experience on SONAR, while
greatly improved, still has a long way to go to actually allowing a genuinely usable DAW experience. As you mentioned, there are many glaring usage limitations that also made me wonder if I was doing it wrong including:
- No right-click support whatsoever
- No ability to select or move clips
- Pen input is needlessly restricted. Instead of functioning like a regular mouse, the pen also functions like a finger with the same limitations that I just mentioned.
- To do anything meaningful in SONAR using touch (other than browse/playback media clips) a mouse is still pretty much mandatory.
mettelus:
I don't think touch is being touted in SONAR as a feature for use on desktops. I think the primary targets are users of tablets or convertible notebooks like the Surface Pro. Until they come up with intelligent ways to scale plugin screens and DAW channels, touch will probably remain not much more than an over-hyped bullet point.
-e.B