@Another User said:
I also am very disturbed by this ridiculous corporate decision to ignore reality by Emagic. Reality, whether that company likes it or not, is Windows. Not MAC. Even though I realize fully that MAC is superior to Windows.
I believe the things Emagic wished to do with Logic could not be accomplished on Windows. Apple invested a lot and brought in some very heavy-weight (in the audio/midi world) programmers to make the audio and MIDI services in OSX top notch. Unlike MS, audio and MIDI is a large chunk of Apple's business, and they want to keep those customers happy.
If you're going to be a multi-platform company, feature parity is VERY important. If one platform doesn't offer the performance and features of the other platform, the users of the lesser performing platform get very upset. I've seen this happen many times. Of the digital audio workstation companies that are attempting to be multi-platform, most that I know of are struggling to have parity, and few have been able to do it. For instance, Windows users of Digidesign PT systems have been upset for a long time. Mac users of Cubase are not happy. If you examine things historically, the choice to be multi-platform has even forced companies out of business (e.g. Opcode's decision to do a Windows version of Vision was the beginning of their slide into oblivion).
Don't worry about Emagic. If they continue to provide the exquisite tool they're providing, with capabilities far exceeding their competition, people will be willing to buy a Mac to run it.
Consider this: I'm a die-hard Mac user (can you tell? [;)]) but I built up two powerful PC's this summer to run GigaStudio. I really wished GS had been available on the Mac, but it wasn't, so I did what I had to do. (Although, watching how Tascam has been running that once promising application into the ground by poor support, promotion, lack of bug fixes, and lack of timely upgrades is making me wonder if I made a mistake.)
At any rate, my feeling is that if an application knocks me out, I'm going to find a way to buy the hardware to run it.
Lee Blaske