i have invested in Source Connect...I have a friend at a studio in Chicago who will rent ISDN studio time to me if I need it at an amazing $50 per half-hour...I travel to New York alot, and have found a studio that a great number of New York promo talent use in Mid-town that also charges a staggering $50 per half-hour of studio time.
That includes an engineer, their studio space, the ISDN line, etc...whoever dials into you, pays the line charges.
I have considered getting ISDN for quite some time. But honestly, I do work for Fox in New York, I just signed with a large affiliate in Philadelphia, and NEITHER of them use ISDN.
In fact, the new affiliate I signed, got RID of their ISDN technology, because it was expensive.
When you can get better quality audio from an mp3...and you can listen in on the phone line...and have the audio delivered within 5 minutes of the end of the session or less...
It seems like the "Endgame" is nearing for ISDN.
And with newer VOIP technologies emerging every day, it's only a matter of time before the ISDN goes the way of the dinosaur...or the Chinese made toy without lead contamination...
Anyway, even in larger markets, there are plenty of options to not HAVE to own your own $5000 ISDN box, with expensive monthly charges, "in case" you need it.
I always tell a potential client, if they ask, that I have ISDN "available"
That seems to be all they need to hear. You don't have to tell them where it's "available"...in your home studio, at a radio station, or at a commercial recording facility.
Doesn't matter to them...and you just build the cost of the rental into your price.
So, if you don't HAVE to have it...don't get it.
Source Connect, for what it's worth, IS an excellent plugin...if not a little on the sluggish side.
The latency between your end, and the producer's end is a bit like Layer 3 on an ISDN...it's around a second...
But, to REALLY get the best benefit of Source Connect, you need to get the EXPENSIVE version...because then you can have dedicated paths between you and your client.
Otherwise, with the lower version, you're kinda up to the whims of the rest of the internet.
It sometimes likes to crap out on you.
Anyway, just some additional food for thought.
And you don't HAVE to have ProTools to run it anymore...it's becoming available in a wide array of other formats soon...but is available in VST for now...
Mike Bratton
Voice Guy
www.mikebrattonvoice.com