jpetersen
Noel Borthwick [Cakewalk]
One thing to look at is that the definition of DAW's is changing and we need to cater to all classes of users who use the program completely differently from you and me. Producers and mix engineers are a relatively small segment of those who use music software. If we want to stay relevant we need to satisfy a wide set of users.
Noel, are you in a position to expand on this?
Read his lips: producers and sound engineers are a small segment of Sonar's user base. So, what's the majority? The casual users and total beginners. They are the ones Sonar is catering to: have you seen the "Add Track" and "LANDR" 'features' in the latest upgrade?
This should be a wake-up call for those who expect Sonar to be competitive with mainstream DAWs like ProTools, Studio One, Logic, Reaper, etc. - the right path for Cakewalk (for financial reasons: LANDR, analytics, etc. are marketing decisions meant to increase revenue) is to make Sonar into the simplest, most powerful, 'beginner-friendliest' software in the entry-level DAW market.
It's a huge gamble that will likely fail because most casual users won't pay for the software they use, while more experienced users will just move on to more robust platforms that cater to their professional needs.
If dumbed-down recording software had any future, Magix Music Maker would be selling like hotcakes...
In any case, a more interesting topic - to me at least - would be Cakewalk's full disclosure of EXACTLY what data is being gathered. Does it go beyond program usage? Does it go beyond Sonar?
And, no, I'm not worried on a personal level: Sonar has never been my main DAW. Odds are I will just completely uninstall once the current project that required I use it is over. Sonar - to me - is a pretty decent DAW being butchered by some very disturbing trends...