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> > I've always been wondering why complex software > > programs such as, er, Cubase > > or Logic don't come with a newbie mode which is dead > > simple and shows only a > > handful of buttons, menus, and options - then after > > this, maybe a mode with > > the most popular options, and then the full mode if > > needed. > > Michael www.michaelpeters.de Regarding Logic the answer is that Logic doesn't need a certain "newbie mode" since any user already has Garageband, that comes bundled with Apple PC's today. Garage band is extremely newbie-friendly and a song started in Garageband can be imported into Logic any time later. With version 8.0 Logic changed quite a lot in order to make it more newbie-friendly. This was at the cost of the formerly exceptional options of customizing it for a small screen. Cubase has nothing as Garageband, but on the other hand I have noticed that not much had changed in SX3 compared to the Cubase version I was using in 1989! That doesn't make it easier for a newcomer, but at least you know that when you have learned it you won't have to re-learn it again ;-) Genereally I agree with Michael, that software should be dirt simple to use - at least for us musicians that try to also be "a producer" at the same time as we play. That is, if we are not happy to work with a partner that takes care of producing the recording of what we do as musical performance. I do a lot of producing in Logic but I totally leave Logic out of the picture when I play music in order to be creative and record my work. My favorite recording application is Bidule. It has a simple "File Recorder Module". After you have started that module it stays in the background and creates eight stereo files on the hard drive from whatever I may create in Mobius eight looper tracks and effect patches I might play. Dirt easy! The most difficult thing is to remember that your noise is being recorded and that you have to turn off the recorder when you have stopped playing. Step two is to stop being "a musician" and start being "a producer"; then I open the multiple files in Logic and produce a mix in the classic multi track tradition. -- Greetings from Sweden Per Boysen www.boysen.se (Swedish) www.looproom.com (international)