- #Steinberg nuendo 3.0.1 mac os x
- #Steinberg nuendo 3.0.1 mac os
- #Steinberg nuendo 3.0.1 movie
- #Steinberg nuendo 3.0.1 pro
- #Steinberg nuendo 3.0.1 professional
Nuendo users can enjoy MIDI plug-ins, the Drum Editor, the Logical Editor and processing functions, the MIDI Device Manager, and so on. Although this move has caused mixed feelings amongst Cubase users (see the Nuendo Vs Cubase box for more information), I think this is actually a brilliant development, because it finally means there's a serious audio workstation that doesn't contain a lacklustre, half-hearted MIDI implementation. Perhaps the most significant set of new features in Nuendo 2 are those inherited from Cubase SX: to put it bluntly, Nuendo now contains every single feature that can be found in Cubase SX.
This was probably the first time Nuendo 2 had been used for such a project, and it highlighted many interesting areas of the application, both good and bad so many of the comments in this review are based on that particular three-week experience.
#Steinberg nuendo 3.0.1 movie
But during the time I was writing this review, I was lucky enough to get the chance to really put Nuendo 2 through its paces on OS X, recording cello and woodwind overdubs at Media Ventures for the soundtrack to the movie Pirates Of The Caribbean. I've had the pleasure playing around with the beta versions of Nuendo since March, getting to know the application as it took the final steps towards release. Instead, Steinberg focused all their resources on the Windows XP- and OS X-only Nuendo 2, following in the footsteps of Cubase SX. Although a beta version of Nuendo 1.x for OS X was announced at the 2002 Frankfurt Musikmesse and publicly discussed on many occasions, a release version never materialised. This version added many new features including VST Instrument support, 9-pin sync and printable track sheets, and Steinberg would later add 192kHz support, VST System Link, and AES 31 file import and export abilities in version 1.6.
#Steinberg nuendo 3.0.1 mac os
While Nuendo was originally released as a Windows-only product, the application itself is based on a portable framework, with Steinberg even announcing a BeOS version at one stage, and a Mac OS 9 version finally became available when Nuendo 1.5 was released in 2001. The advantage to this approach, which has been diluted in recent years as third-party DSP cards have increased in popularity, is scalability: you can run Nuendo on any system, be it a laptop or a desktop, workstation or server, and open any Project without needing to worry about installing extra hardware. From the start, Nuendo was conceived as a native application that would require no additional DSP processing power, where the audio engine could record and play back at any sampling rate and resolution and utilise any installed physical inputs and outputs.
Nuendo 1.0 was released for Windows in the Spring of 2000 after four years of research and development, during which time it evolved from an application originally announced for Silcon Graphics workstations to one intended for the Windows NT platform.
#Steinberg nuendo 3.0.1 pro
This achievement, coupled with the fact both versions ship in the same box, is worthy of praise by itself, in an era where software companies are increasingly aligning themselves with a single platform - predictions among users that Mac support would be dropped after Pinnacle's buyout of Steinberg last year have proved to be unfounded, and while Digidesign also offer a Windows version of Pro Tools, it isn't supplied in the same box as the Mac version.
#Steinberg nuendo 3.0.1 mac os x
Only a year after Cubase SX was released for Windows, followed by a Mac OS X version some months later, the company have released the second major version of Nuendo for both Windows XP and Mac OS X platforms simultaneously. In recent times, Steinberg have had a habit of releasing highly anticipated applications on what now seems like an annual basis. But in an industry dominated by Digidesign, will it be enough to lure potential users away from their Pro Tools rigs?
#Steinberg nuendo 3.0.1 professional
Since its first release three years ago, Nuendo has raised a great deal of interest among those who need a professional audio production tool, and with Nuendo 2, Steinberg have developed one of most ambitious native-based audio systems yet seen. The Track Split feature on the Project window has been engaged to keep the Video and the dialogue, click and reference Audio Tracks held at the top, enabling you to use the lower half as your main working window.