Crippleware: Why, I’ll Cripple You!

I am evaluating music sequencers to use with my new E-MU Xboard 49. It came with Ableton Live Lite 4 and Proteus X LE, and my sound card (Soundblaster Audigy 2 ZS Platinum) came with Cubasis VST (Cubase lite) and FL Studio 4 Creative Edition. Not one full version in the bunch. I can respect that, but the way some versions were created is very frustrating.
     Kudos to Steinberg and Proteus. From my limited usage, they seem to be true, self-contained lite editions of other products. Ableton and FL, however, did a half-assed hack job. First off, Ableton hasn’t created a Lite version of Live 5, which shipped last fall. So it’s basically Live 4 with Operator (optional software synth) running in demo mode, with an option to hide the features not in the Lite version. If you could fully hide them, that’d be great, but I keep getting messages that read, “You are trying to access a hidden feature, you need to switch to demo mode”. Hidden feature? It’s right on the menu, jackass! Sometimes I get them from trying to drag and drop things. I should never see those messages, it should just not allow the operation, or show that you can do it. Also, you can’t save or export in demo mode, making it pretty worthless to me. Couldn’t they just remove the export functions, so you could save work but not render it to an audio (MP3, WAV, etc) file? Then every time you came up with a cool song or loop, you’d have more incentive to upgrade. It has built in tutorials and a hefty manual, but neither were pared down to match the Lite version. The manual has links that read, “See the feature chart to find out if your version even has this feature.” Of course, the feature chart hasn’t been created yet. I spent a lot less time with FL Studio, because I was getting those same “This version can’t do that” messages. My patience was used up with Live.
     This is a shame, because Live seems like a cool product. And after all that bitching and moaning, I can’t find a better product for the money. Owning the Lite version allows me to upgrade to Live 5 for $200. I’ve also looked at Reason 3 ($200 academic price), Sonar 5 Producer ($420 street) and Cubase SX3 ($400 academic price). Reason is the only one that comes close price-wise, but it can’t do audio recording, which I need for recording my dulcet tones. I may pick up Reason later, as it’s considered an excellent companion to Live, which is lacking in the instrument department. I’ll let you know how it goes in an upcoming article.

4 thoughts on “Crippleware: Why, I’ll Cripple You!”

  1. I use Sonar (4, not tried 5 yet).
    I’ve had people religiously try to convert me to Reason.
    But I’ve been on Cakewalk since Cakewalk 4.5.
    Since then it went to Cakewalk 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, then after ten or so they started over again calling it “Sonar”.
    i feel if i change now, I’ll be a traitor or something.
    I still have that 4.5 CD and manual. Why do I save these things?
    One thing about Cakewalk… they don’t just throw on a new version number for the new year. They always have major improvements/enhancements that make it fun all over again. It makes you go back and do remixes of tunes you already wrote.

  2. I’m sure Sonar is a great product, but it’s more than twice the price of Live 5 for me. I bought Live 5 last night, and I’m going through the tutorials now. I’ll review it after I know what I’m doing with it.

  3. Oh. I was seeing that “Demo Mode” message too when I tried to make Ableton Live Lite send MIDI to drive my Proteus XL soft synth sounds that came with the EMU 404 card I bought last week. Bummer. Live Lite is fun to play with in the 1st tutorial but the MIDI tutorial doesn’t work for beans and I’m not going to pay extra to find out how the full version does with the soft synths in Proteus XL.

    It’s funny how Creative Labs threw a bunch of software on a couple of CDs they sell with their sound cards and they expect you to figure out how or if they work together. And a few of them do the same thing, too.

    Guess I’ll stick with the Cubase sequencer/recorder for now. Seems to do what it’s supposed to do, even if it doesn’t have the fun improv capablities of Live Lite.

Comments are closed.