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Post by Johnkenn on Dec 20, 2023 22:17:28 GMT -6
They can't go back to selling $300 plugins now, can they? They've been blowing these plugs out, and now people are just going to wait on sales to buy.
Or, they're blowing these things out because something new is coming? No idea...
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ericn
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Post by ericn on Dec 20, 2023 22:19:33 GMT -6
They could be simply buying market share.
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Post by chessparov on Dec 20, 2023 22:23:23 GMT -6
Universal market share.
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Post by bossanova on Dec 20, 2023 22:27:11 GMT -6
They can't go back to selling $300 plugins now, can they? They've been blowing these plugs out, and now people are just going to wait on sales to buy. Or, they're blowing these things out because something new is coming? No idea... I don’t think so. I’m guessing that whatever they’re making on the sales is projected to be more profitable than what they were making at previous prices selling to DSP owners (they already got…$150? from me this year that they hadn’t been picking up previously). For their sake I hope so because, as you said, you can’t really put that genie back in the bottle. There are too many alternatives to sell someone a 1176 plug for $100 when they have a reasonable expectation that it will hit $30 once or twice a year.
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Post by Oneiro on Dec 20, 2023 22:27:58 GMT -6
The pro user will no longer be the target audience for anyone anymore.
The age of techs building cool stuff that gets productized in brief runs and then forever inflated is upon us.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 20, 2023 22:54:10 GMT -6
They’re no longer top of the line like they were in 2010. U-he, TDR, Goodhertz, and PSP put out products with serious vibe that aren’t inferior ersatz of old analog gear.
Or even if they are… that PSP Binamp is dope and I got it for 19 dollars. Take that 200 dollar DSP plugs.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 20, 2023 22:59:16 GMT -6
The pro user will no longer be the target audience for anyone anymore. The age of techs building cool stuff that gets productized in brief runs and then forever inflated is upon us. The good design is in plugs mostly now. Nobody wants to buy the recent new vca comps or new design eqs made with modern ics. You cannot sell those to audiophile losers like you can tape transformers, and tubes.
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Post by Johnkenn on Dec 20, 2023 23:45:55 GMT -6
It’s always kind of funny to me that we aren’t seeing UA try and keep making their current roster of plugs even better as the years move on. I bought the axefx from one of our esteemed members here about a month and a half ago and there have already been 3 firmware updates and multiple betas. Cliff designed this thing and constantly works to improve the sonics. I’ve had three of these things (I know, shocker) and it’s been this way every time I’ve had it. So - all that to say - UA should be doing this too.
To add - IMO, the modeling that Cliff does with this thing seems much closer to the actual hardware than plugins do. I mean - if I wasn’t lazy, I’d see how these compare with my main plugs.
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Post by copperx on Dec 21, 2023 0:28:32 GMT -6
I think it's clear that the leadership at UA does not see DSP chips as the future, regardless of what every single representative at UADforum says. Actions speak louder than words.
Designing and manufacturing hardware around DSP chips cannot be more profitable than selling native plugins, even if they are massively discounted. The market for native plugins is orders of magnitude bigger than Apollo owners.
It's all cool. I'm glad to be able to use their products now. I refused to buy their hardware for decades because it seemed silly to have to buy a computer to run plugins when I already had a computer, regardless of how good they were.
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Post by kcatthedog on Dec 21, 2023 5:47:10 GMT -6
The dilemma is that UA offers very little new to the established client, after you have your interface and the plugs you want, what are you going to buy from UA: not much, So, UA switched focus over the last while and is putting lots of effort into launching new products so not much focused on the old school pro users, but new users to hook them up to the lets build revenue stream. I sold my ua stuff for the second time a year or so ago because of the inequitable way it was treating old clients vs new in terms of plug pricing. At the time, I said at ua forum, for ua to be equitable, it should just give licenses to those of us who had already paid more for fewer licences, than the new users who had only paid for a subscription for a few months and then were able to buy Ultimate for less than $ 1000. Let's just say that idea was not supported I returned to the UA forum recently due to buying the Signature bundle: all its plugs that now run natively. I noticed Drew has started a thread about exploring how UA could better serve its establish cliental. He was looking for volunteers. I responded, radio silence. I expect plug prices to stay low, UA to put some, not all major new plugs into the subscription plan and for more uad2 to be ported over to UADx.
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Post by Quint on Dec 21, 2023 8:15:48 GMT -6
I noticed Drew has started a thread about exploring how UA could better serve its establish cliental. He was looking for volunteers. I responded, radio silence. What thread is this? I haven't seen it.
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Post by thehightenor on Dec 21, 2023 8:42:49 GMT -6
The pro user will no longer be the target audience for anyone anymore. The age of techs building cool stuff that gets productized in brief runs and then forever inflated is upon us. The good design is in plugs mostly now. Nobody wants to buy the recent new vca comps or new design eqs made with modern ics. You cannot sell those to audiophile losers like you can tape transformers, and tubes. Dan, we were making so much progress .... bonding over our hate of Sennheiser monitors! And then .... You have to go and be mean to me
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Post by kcatthedog on Dec 21, 2023 8:45:16 GMT -6
I was feeling the lov too
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Post by kcatthedog on Dec 21, 2023 8:45:51 GMT -6
I noticed Drew has started a thread about exploring how UA could better serve its establish cliental. He was looking for volunteers. I responded, radio silence. What thread is this? I haven't seen it. I’ll look for it.
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Post by guitfiddler on Dec 21, 2023 10:29:22 GMT -6
Yeah, but when they come out with the SHITS-FITS-ATOMIZER plugin and give you that cool video presentation, it will be $300 I’m thinking! 🤔 😆
Yeah, really wanted to go Satellite for years, but held off because why buy a computer when I had a computer and an Apollo Octo(2 Apollos Quad cores) to run plugins! I’m going to let my Waves expire this year as well! Bye bye Waves! I wish you could just sell plugins and not WUP the shit out of us! 👋🏻 I think I’m going anti-audio companies this year. Going back to analog, tired of all the digital bs! Apple 🖕🏻
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Post by Deleted on Dec 21, 2023 11:50:33 GMT -6
The good design is in plugs mostly now. Nobody wants to buy the recent new vca comps or new design eqs made with modern ics. You cannot sell those to audiophile losers like you can tape transformers, and tubes. Which new VCA comps/eqs come to mind? Most shops just push the clones of the old stuff.
The Dangerous Compressor, Elysia, Daking, and all of the crazy stuff that uses analog multipliers to construct discrete vcas. Nobody wants to make anything new not that many of their would be purchasers even know how to use an LA2A or DBX 160.
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Post by thehightenor on Dec 21, 2023 12:12:51 GMT -6
Of course, as many know.
There’s a real art to using an LA2A or Retro STA Level for example.
The lack of controls don’t make those units easier to use, quite the contrary- it makes them much harder to use correctly imho.
Control of compression and added tone fall in part to mic placement/ source selection - understanding the sweet spot of each unit etc.
It’s taken me a fair amount of time and experimentation to master my “simple” two knob compressors.
Same goes for a pre-amps and EQ’s - hardware has way more subtle possibilities and depth of artistic possibilities (in the truest sense) than their cartoon digital cousins.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 21, 2023 13:20:49 GMT -6
Of course, as many know. There’s a real art to using an LA2A or Retro STA Level for example. The lack of controls don’t make those units easier to use, quite the contrary- it makes them much harder to use correctly imho. Control of compression and added tone fall in part to mic placement/ source selection - understanding the sweet spot of each unit etc. It’s taken me a fair amount of time and experimentation to master my “simple” two knob compressors. Same goes for a pre-amps and EQ’s - hardware has way more subtle possibilities and depth of artistic possibilities (in the truest sense) than their cartoon digital cousins. Agreed. They can be much harder to get a transparent, useful control out of than the auto peak-crest detectors because their ability to control the volume of the signal (whether using the various LAs or something like a DBX 160) is correlated to the user's skill at getting the signal level to the areas of gain reduction where the compressor is most program dependent, where the peaks make it speed up or slow down with the signal depending on the settings of the compressor. This same holds true for many other pure peak or RMS compressors on the auto settings where they should probably usually be used when controlling the signal like the SSL Bus comp or Daking compressors. More modern design compressors either calculate peak crest for you regardless of level (the Drawmer auto compressors, Weiss DS-1, Dangerous Compressor's Smart Dynamics, U-he Presswerk). Others let you control the secondary peak-crest threshold yourself for greater control (Aphex Compellor, GML 8900, Crane Song STC-8, Kotelnikov, MDWDRC2). The first have a lot of knobs but are hard to make sound bad. The second are hard for new users to learn until you learn to use one. All the producers have the free version of Kotelnikov but hardly any of them know how to use it.
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Post by Johnkenn on Dec 21, 2023 13:37:07 GMT -6
Of course, as many know. There’s a real art to using an LA2A or Retro STA Level for example. The lack of controls don’t make those units easier to use, quite the contrary- it makes them much harder to use correctly imho. Control of compression and added tone fall in part to mic placement/ source selection - understanding the sweet spot of each unit etc. It’s taken me a fair amount of time and experimentation to master my “simple” two knob compressors. Same goes for a pre-amps and EQ’s - hardware has way more subtle possibilities and depth of artistic possibilities (in the truest sense) than their cartoon digital cousins. Although, I'd say that's a bug and not a feature...It's one of the reasons I go back and forth with Sta-levels.
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Post by doubledog on Dec 21, 2023 19:58:01 GMT -6
back to the OT... I think UA finally.... or maybe UA customers finally realized that many of their plugins were available for $29 from PA (the BX stuff) or equivalents from other places that compete head to head. UA has to compete with that (and Waves and more...) I bought a lot of UAD plugins (all from sales) for my Apollo 16 and then got a lot of Native plugins when they came out, which I was glad to see. This year I bought $0 for black friday/holiday sales. Partly because I really didn't need any more (and BX and Softtube and others had the same stuff cheaper), but I'm also ticked off because after 10.2.0 they broke all the firewire drivers. Supposedly they still support it for Windows (and older Mac versions) but it seems they cut it out for everything even though they won't admit it. UA support told me that 11.0.1 fixed it, so I spent 2 hours loading up the new version, found out it did the same shit, uninstalled and re-installed 10.2.0 (the last version I can get to work) and then deleted all the plugins I don't have (although I tried UADmate this time which works pretty well) . They have definitely taken their focus off DSP to work on Spark/Native. What they really want is to sign you up for a Spark subscription. The oh so lucrative world of recurring revenues! I find myself looking at other interfaces these days... (I still have a Quad PCIe card and I don't use the console plugins that often anymore).
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Post by kcatthedog on Dec 21, 2023 21:52:57 GMT -6
Check out the signature bundle it’s all the native plugs. If you like that bundle, you could sell your UA stuff, get your new interface and buy signature and run native.
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ericn
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Post by ericn on Dec 21, 2023 22:29:38 GMT -6
Check out the signature bundle it’s all the native plugs. If you like that bundle, you could sell your UA stuff, get your new interface and buy signature and run native. [br Oh Drew I’m going to bet your lurking on this thread, if you’re not well you’re not doing your job. What you really need to do is convince those in charge to unofficially, unannounced, is grant those who buy into this deal a lic. Tag allows them to use the DSP versions as well. Let me explain, you want the market share, but your pushing this direct, so your dealers that have only seen the DSP sales a reason to push UA. If they understand that unofficially the deal will include DSP they can sell the DSP knowing the customer can run both. The dealer gets a piece and you get a piece. Plus if the dealer is pushing the. DSP for you, UA gets the customer in the eco system and gets the long term value added sales. If the bosses see the vision just give me a lic. For everything UAD cause they would pay a small fortune to a consultant what is a simple duh.
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Post by kcatthedog on Dec 22, 2023 4:27:46 GMT -6
The signature bundle is something you buy and do get perpetual license for, it just also happens to currently include 100% of the subscription plug ins 44 in total, I think.
It was recently on sale for 50% off, an excellent value form UA. Only catch, is I believe you cannot sell UADx plug ins.
UA dsp is ok, but if you have a fast computer you just don't need it anymore and ua's card's are clearly on the table now so why buy into its old model.
The only time you don't get a perpetual license from UA is when you use its subscription plan, which regulaly is also discounted, 01 cent for 3 months or 1$ for a year etc..
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Post by niklas1073 on Dec 22, 2023 5:56:42 GMT -6
I think this topic was quite surgically examined some weeks ago in another thread here if I remember correctly. Ive seen this lately across many forums, whenever the dsp vs native and “there is no place dsp anymore” is debated, the comments usually reveal that the majority of uad dsp users discussing the topic never used the dsp for the sake of dsp, only to be able to run uad plugs. Very often maybe not fully understanding the benefit of dsp and how the fundaments of UA ecosystem is built on that way beyond the idea of dsp vs native in plug usage. The whole why buy a computer to run plugs when I have a computer is rather irrelevant. That is not really what dsp is there for. A growing number of plug buyers today i believe do not record live audio, which obviously speaks for a growing market of native plugs and that is for sure dominating the plug industry. So it makes sense for UA to get a cut of that. In a recording environment native really is not a substitute, if you are relying on the benefits of dsp workflow.
So I wouldn’t be surprised if there would be a stable dsp usage in the future too, despite the natives will for sure eat up a significant part of that crowd who only used dsp for the sake of plugs. The native will bring a bunch of new users though that might cover that void economically.
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Post by kcatthedog on Dec 22, 2023 6:56:01 GMT -6
? Not really understanding you. Prior to UA going native, there was no choice, you had to use UA dsp to run UA plugs: period. Whether, you tracked with them and needed an apollo was a choice. Now, with uadX and Luna, you don’t need UA dsp, you might choose to run apollo but you don’t have to. The only reason to buy UA dsp now is to run the uad2 plugs which are not native: yet. The only ua plug for me on that list would be ampex, but there are other tape options, studer runs natively or competitors’ plug, won’t be buying UA dsp for one plug, that’s for sure!
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