Alborada:
I really dont think the SE is comparable to the Cube and I don't think that the SE's appearance at about 10% of the cost of the full Cube is simply a story of the kind of depreciation that affects the world of high technology. It's a differet animal. After all you could get a large library of sampled orchestral instruments for $200 with the Garritan Personal Orchestra, or an even larger one from EWQLSO (Gold and Gold XP bundle) for $900. But these are not the same as each other or the Cube or the SE. According to Herb the SE is sampled in whole steps rather than in 1/2 steps, the Bösendorfer in the SE has about 10% of the content of the original, there are fewer velocity layers, etc. Where the SE might come in handy for Cube owners is that it allows one to take one's work along when traveling and one might also be able to use it in combination with the Cube to conserve computer resources - - e.g. there might be places in even a very sophisticated mockup that don't require the kind of variety (and, therefore, RAM footprint) the Cube provides. If you bought a real Steinway grand, I don't think you'd be upset that, besides building great pianos, Steinway is collaborating with Garritan to provide an "offical" Steinway sample library for $200. It will, no doubt, sound pretty good, but will it be the same as a real 9' Steinway Concert Grand?
I really dont think the SE is comparable to the Cube and I don't think that the SE's appearance at about 10% of the cost of the full Cube is simply a story of the kind of depreciation that affects the world of high technology. It's a differet animal. After all you could get a large library of sampled orchestral instruments for $200 with the Garritan Personal Orchestra, or an even larger one from EWQLSO (Gold and Gold XP bundle) for $900. But these are not the same as each other or the Cube or the SE. According to Herb the SE is sampled in whole steps rather than in 1/2 steps, the Bösendorfer in the SE has about 10% of the content of the original, there are fewer velocity layers, etc. Where the SE might come in handy for Cube owners is that it allows one to take one's work along when traveling and one might also be able to use it in combination with the Cube to conserve computer resources - - e.g. there might be places in even a very sophisticated mockup that don't require the kind of variety (and, therefore, RAM footprint) the Cube provides. If you bought a real Steinway grand, I don't think you'd be upset that, besides building great pianos, Steinway is collaborating with Garritan to provide an "offical" Steinway sample library for $200. It will, no doubt, sound pretty good, but will it be the same as a real 9' Steinway Concert Grand?