D
DoogieDown
Guest
I've worked with both and appreciate the pros (which BOTH have) and am frustrated by the cons (which BOTH have).
Audition trounces Pro Tools with it's ability to save mp3's quickly. Bouncing to disk in Pro Tools is a real drag.
Audition's use of the two-button mouse is superior to the one-button environment of Pro Tools on a Mac.
But one of the greatest things about Pro Tools is that it gives you lots of incentive to buy a Mac. The damned-near-zero-sound latency of a Mac trumps the heck out of sound delays of PC's--especially the discount PC's that most corporate radio stations are willing to buy. And Mac towers always arrive with high quality parts inside. Not so with bargain priced PC's.
Another tip of the hat to Pro Tools: Its Time Compression plug-in is GREAT. Even Pro Tools FREE came with it. Meanwhile, Audition's price continues to rise and the Time Compression is horrible.
In the message string below I noticed a complaint about crashes. My advice to EVERYONE on this board is to learn how to maintain your own computer. Don't depend on the I.T. Dept. to do it. It's been five years (and four I.T. people) since I've worked with someone who knew something about maintaining a computer whose primary function was digital editing. When a radio station interviews an I.T. person for a job, they make sure the person can maintain a Network and an e-mail server. But digital editing software is way beyond most I.T. peoples' expertise. We in the prod department pay the price.
You should run frequent disk error checks and disk de-frags when running PC Audition. And Disk Warrior is your best friend when running Pro Tools on a Mac. There's no reason for computer crashes and freezes to be a part of your existence.
Audition trounces Pro Tools with it's ability to save mp3's quickly. Bouncing to disk in Pro Tools is a real drag.
Audition's use of the two-button mouse is superior to the one-button environment of Pro Tools on a Mac.
But one of the greatest things about Pro Tools is that it gives you lots of incentive to buy a Mac. The damned-near-zero-sound latency of a Mac trumps the heck out of sound delays of PC's--especially the discount PC's that most corporate radio stations are willing to buy. And Mac towers always arrive with high quality parts inside. Not so with bargain priced PC's.
Another tip of the hat to Pro Tools: Its Time Compression plug-in is GREAT. Even Pro Tools FREE came with it. Meanwhile, Audition's price continues to rise and the Time Compression is horrible.
In the message string below I noticed a complaint about crashes. My advice to EVERYONE on this board is to learn how to maintain your own computer. Don't depend on the I.T. Dept. to do it. It's been five years (and four I.T. people) since I've worked with someone who knew something about maintaining a computer whose primary function was digital editing. When a radio station interviews an I.T. person for a job, they make sure the person can maintain a Network and an e-mail server. But digital editing software is way beyond most I.T. peoples' expertise. We in the prod department pay the price.
You should run frequent disk error checks and disk de-frags when running PC Audition. And Disk Warrior is your best friend when running Pro Tools on a Mac. There's no reason for computer crashes and freezes to be a part of your existence.