This message isn't meant as any negative review of your libraries. It is a cry for help.
I have Special Editions Strings Vol.1 Strings, Special Edtions Strings Vol.1 Strings PLUS and Vienna Instruments PRO 2. It is running on a Windows machine, W7/X64, i7, 24 GB RAM, 4 HDD's (2x 500GB, 2x 1TB). Sufficient to make it work, I think. I am not in the mood for additional computers, so some software/usage for LAN etc. isn't in the picture.
I started composing with the computer in 2002 with some very modest programs i.e. rudimentary DAW, notation programs, The Grand (-piano Steinberg) and the JV1010. Later I found out about Garritan and bought the full GPO, the JABB and the so-called Stradivari Solo Violin, much later the Steinway Professional. It took quite a while to get those things work - I never became friends with the JABB and the Stradivari Violin. I was happy - apart from the "sample bugs" in all Garritan libs I had.
Then much later via updates, crossgrades, etc. I purchased SONAR 8, EWQL Symphonic Orchestra Platinum+ and was astonished by the quality of sound and the ease of handling the numerous articulations. But again, some serious sample problems (switching panning, etc.) drove me into the arms of Vienna, trying to get a better sound for solo string instruments. EWQL released Hollywood strings and all demo's were "cinematic" or "epic" (even those for my original SO Plat+). I am not making movie tracks!! I listen to Bruckner, Mahler, Prokofiev and Shostakovich (of course also everything from Albrechtsberger to Glass) and they aren't epic recordings.
Looking at your demo's, quite a lot aren't recordings as made in a Concert Hall, they are drifting towards "epic" or cinematic. Looking at your instrument setup where Strings are combined with Strings 8va, in my point of view, this is not the real thing; for me a violins section is a violins section. Listening to your demo's, I wonder how you made them. Since I'd bought my Vienna share of instruments, I experimented with sounds, articulations, crossfades, veloXF's and other stuff, had my share of the instructions on video (over and over again), re-read the manuals, but never it sounds like the ones in your (non-epic) demo's. Pity. Some sample errors stood in the way. I noticed that some strings articulations of the free orchestral strings had different panning. Why? Some articulations were implemented quite different than what I expected. Even distorted.
But setting aside these things, the overall sound is great, better than EWQL. But why aren't there separate samples for violins I vs.violins II as in Garritan? Why do I encounter phasing when I assigned my violins I and violins II in different instances of VI? The EWQL-PLAY doesn't have this as far as I've noticed. Why panning shifting on different articulations? Has it to do with the transition of recorded mono to stereo (timing issues?).
And the main question is, how on earth are you guys making the demo's suited for my ears so wonderful sounding? Are you using different instruments? Are there any hidden secrets? For me and a friend of mine (who also has Vienna stuff), it would be very useful when somebody made some tutorial - video of not - of how he/she made it, step by step. Now it is like the Sorcerer's apprentice who is left in the dark.
When a great product isn't explained fully, telling about all knobs and sliders, then even a Ferrari is disappointing. Make the dashboard comprehensive, please. If not, then I stop purchasing new things, because I can't use them the way they are designed for. You may direct me to the website of Beat Kaufmann. He has some tutorials, but I refuse paying for these instructions, they must be an integral part of your product. The instructional manual of any car (or else) must not be subject to third party commercial activities. The forum isn't giving me the answers I am looking for. Is it really so hard for some guys letting others know how they did it or is this again some "I did it my way" and I am not telling how.
Maybe useful, I always work with written notation and midi from it.
With regards,
Raymond