I'm sorry, but to me that article is totally groundless. And everything he says is completely unlikely.
First, they could change the name, but there's absolutely no reason for them to throw away all the present Logic users and start over. It wouldn't surprise me if they made the interface easier to deal with when you first learn it, but they're not going to remove all the things that make Logic so flexible once you figure it out.
And it's also likely that they understand what it is people like about Pro Tools that Logic doesn't have. As I've said before, it wouldn't take much to make it work the same way. Everything about PT that makes it easier to edit audio in stems from the way you work directly on the waveform display; in Logic you can only do that in the sample editor. But everything like tabbing to the end/beginning of regions, etc. could follow easily if that one seemingly little operational difference were fixed (and I mean fixed, because the way it works now is broken - much as I like Logic).
That will not make a Pro Tools killer - there's no such thing, as we've seen repeatedly over the years. It's true that everyone would like to be able to interchange sessions more easily, but that's nothing new. OMFs are what they are because I don't see most companies feeling it's a high priority to make them seamless.
If Apple is going to come out with a touch screen - and with Microsoft's table it makes sense they would - it's not going to be dedicated only to Logic.
There's also no reason to *believe* that Logic will acquire 64-bit memory access. We can hope, but I wouldn't be surprised if that didn't happen at all.
What cm says about static RAM essentially solving the memory access problem makes me wonder. Will it be affordable before 64-bit audio programs come along?
First, they could change the name, but there's absolutely no reason for them to throw away all the present Logic users and start over. It wouldn't surprise me if they made the interface easier to deal with when you first learn it, but they're not going to remove all the things that make Logic so flexible once you figure it out.
And it's also likely that they understand what it is people like about Pro Tools that Logic doesn't have. As I've said before, it wouldn't take much to make it work the same way. Everything about PT that makes it easier to edit audio in stems from the way you work directly on the waveform display; in Logic you can only do that in the sample editor. But everything like tabbing to the end/beginning of regions, etc. could follow easily if that one seemingly little operational difference were fixed (and I mean fixed, because the way it works now is broken - much as I like Logic).
That will not make a Pro Tools killer - there's no such thing, as we've seen repeatedly over the years. It's true that everyone would like to be able to interchange sessions more easily, but that's nothing new. OMFs are what they are because I don't see most companies feeling it's a high priority to make them seamless.
If Apple is going to come out with a touch screen - and with Microsoft's table it makes sense they would - it's not going to be dedicated only to Logic.
There's also no reason to *believe* that Logic will acquire 64-bit memory access. We can hope, but I wouldn't be surprised if that didn't happen at all.
What cm says about static RAM essentially solving the memory access problem makes me wonder. Will it be affordable before 64-bit audio programs come along?