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Sync ableton to waves multirack
Sync ableton to waves multirack




sync ableton to waves multirack

If the plugins and the daw they are housed in are very well programmed, then its true that you could see a significant increase in performance. just like a real kitchen, if they each know their specific tasks then they can save time. if they are an excellent team and the communication is rock solid, they will get it done faster than 1 person could. at its worst, each chef will be doing their own duty, get blocked by waiting for another chef, and it will take more time to get all the sandwiches. but only if they each made the sandwich entirely by themselves. If you make 4 sandwiches with 4 chefs, that would be the best. worse still if each chef made 1/4 of a complete sandwich and then had to somehow glue the quarters together.

sync ableton to waves multirack

you'd have been better making the sandwich yourself. if the guy on meat and the guy on mustard duty finish before the bread is prepared, then you get bottlenecks and the summation of your processor power is less efficient.

sync ableton to waves multirack

it _could_ be faster to use the 4 chefs, but they each have to talk to each other about which task they will do, and how they will return the pieces to make a whole.

sync ableton to waves multirack

Multi-core is more like this: you can make a sandwich by yourself in 1 kitchen, or you could make 1 sandwich using 4 chefs in 4 smaller kitchens. like, 1 core is taking on more processes than it can handle. I agree that you can potentially run more plugins if they effectively use multi-cores - and have never said anything to the contrary.īut we are talking about cpu overloading. This is fine as I prefer to run Maschine standalone and sync other DAWs to it as I need them via the virtual MIDI output, and still have Maschine's transport control working in sync with other DAWs. But when I run the same instance of Maschine with the same plugins loaded as standalone instead of as a plugin in Live, alongside the same project in Live, the CPU overloading disappears. Now, when I run Maschine as a plugin in Ableton Live for example (which has multicore support and is able to spread multiple instances of Maschine amongst multiple cores, but is still 32bit) along with other plugins loaded in Live, I can start to overload my cpu after a certain point. Most of the music software I use these days I run in 64bit including Maschine. What's ironic about people complaining about lack of multicore support is that I'm finding that Maschine standalone can be much more efficient than running it as a plugin in a DAW with multicore support.īeing able to run in 64bit seems to be key in being more CPU efficient from my experience. Whether your cpu would be maxed would depend on which plugins you're using and how you're using them and what type of system configuration you have. Click to expand.That's never going to be true for everyone since "put 2 vst plugins" is quite meaningless without more explanation.






Sync ableton to waves multirack