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scottkrk

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  1. UA and Slate are now M1/M2 Native UA Link https://help.uaudio.com/hc/en-us/articles/360057137692-Apple-Silicon-M1-Compatibility-Info Slate https://slatedigital.zendesk.com/hc/en-us/articles/360060388814-Apple-ARM-Support-M1-Processors-
  2. David, thanks for the confirmation. I will provide feedback to Apple but I am sure it would carry more weight also coming from you 😉
  3. Many thanks David for pointing me in the right direction. 🙂 I accidentally "transposed" the Take Folder region by using the ⌥ ⇧ key command, but the audio wasn't actually transposed. BTW there is no Transpose value in the Region Inspector for the actual Take Folder, so should you be able to transpose a Take Folder or is this a bug? Note the key command does work as expected at the Individual Take level , there is a Transpose Value in the Region Inspector for the Take and the Take is audibly transposed. Is this a bug or am I missing something?
  4. I opened an old project and (+5) was appended to a Take Folder name (see screenshot below), can someone please tell me what this means/indicates?
  5. I had ordered an MOTU interface and it arrives tomorrow so I thought I would do one last google search for 'AMT8 M1', I'm glad I did! I don't remember seeing it in the 10.7.4 release notes, but anyway, I'm glad that Apple have released an offical driver. I always imagined the Emagic/Apple guys in the Logic development team would still be using Unitors/AMTs. It is great to see Apple being more responsive to the Pro App community, baby steps but definitely in the right direction My next goal is to get SoundDiver working in Win11 compatibility mode via parallels on M1
  6. MCNG thanks so much for sharing your work on the 'Magic' Midi Interface Driver I have done some rudimentary testing with the Logic's Musical Typing Keyboard and can confirm: 1. AMT8 Ports in AMS and Logic 2. I can change AMT8 ports in Logic and observe corresponding changes on the AMT Port Midi Out LEDs 3. When I get the chance I will load songs using multiple midi modules and test. 4. Is there anything in particular you want me to test? Option to Notarize Plug-in Using System Preferences for those that don't want to use the Terminal app 1. Unzip and move MagicUSBMidiDriver.plugin to /Libray/Audio/MIDI Drivers/ 2. Open Audio Midi Setup> Window Menu> Show Midi Studio 3. Click 'Ok' on the error message 4. Open System Preferences > Security & Privacy>General Tab 5. Click 'Allow Anyway' button, see attached image 6. Connect AMT8 and power on you should see the AMT8 in the AMS Midi Studio window
  7. I left feedback suggest you do the same - Logic Pro > Provide Logic Pro Feedback I doubt it will be announced in the OS release notes but probably mentioned in the next LP release notes. The driver could be delivered via various means and from memory in the past 5 years it didn't require the user to download. Nothing is guaranteed but I am still quietly confident 1. Many Emagic guys worked for, or are still working at Apple, I'm sure some still have hardware synths and use AMT/Unitor8 and will request the current development team support AMT8/Unitor 8. 2. Another encouraging sign, look at: File>Project Settings>Synchronisation>Unitor , all the Unitor timecode settings are still there in 10.6.1, they haven't been removed. So I haven't given up hope yet!
  8. @Ripz I'm in the same boat chugging along with my old 2012 intel iMac but looking forward to trying out the M1 MBP. I'm confident given that OS recognises the device, that a native driver will be forth coming in the next couple of months, it is actually amazing that the AMT8 is supported over 20 years on, the only thing I would ask for is more of the Unitor8/AMT control panel functionality into the LP preferences.
  9. I can confirm the OP’s experience and have given feedback to Apple via Logic menu item.
  10. even when apple drops support for intel machines (& i doubt that will happen 'soon'), logic will still run on my (aging!) 2019 imac... for years to come. will move to arm when & if it's time (& i know my plugins will work). interfaces are easy to replace, needed plugins are not. but am not worried; fabfilter (for example) now runs native on the M1, and others will follow suit. worse-case scenario: i move to an arm mac, and some synths don't work in rosetta2. i'd have finished all important work before getting the new mac, and, if need be... would find new synths to work with. and so on. Good to hear you won't be one of those annoying people complaining when Apple drop Intel support.
  11. have you tried logic on the new mac? am not sure what your point is... why do you need a separate mac for music?? Yes I have tried Logic on the new M1 MBP and with first party plugins it is fast and responsive but it is unusable for me because my audio interface, midi interfaces and most third-party plugins don't work with Apple Silicon. My point is you would be crazy to buy into legacy Intel silicon at this point, you would also be crazy to buy into Apple Silicon at this point if you use unsupported third party hardware or plugins, I was suggesting to the OP hang in with your current setup if you can. In the past I have needed a seperate desktop Mac for music because desktop silicon was significantly faster than laptop silicon mostly due to thermal constraints, hence the comment about Intel silicon being like steam engine, i.e. hot and noisy. Apple Silicon holds a lot of promise but I have to wait for third-party hardware and software support to know if I can replace my iMac and MBP with one machine PS Your signature indicates you bought a 2019 iMac and are in a good position to ride out this transition, good for you in the short term, but Intel is legacy silicon and if history is anything to go by Apple will probably drop support sooner rather than later, so maybe not so good for you in the medium term depending on how long you like to keep a machine.
  12. To the OP, my advice would be hold off for a few months if you can, because: 1. Intel is now legacy silicon for Macs 2. It will take months for driver and plugin support for Apple Silicon 3. More powerful MBP and MMP may only be 3-6 months away I bought an M1 MBP at launch to replace my ageing 2015 13" MBP the M1 is fast, cool and quiet. I can finally say farewell to Intel heat and fans, it's been like moving from a steam train to an electric! For music production I will limp-by with my ageing 2012 iMac but l look forward to a time when I no longer need a seperate iMac for music...
  13. I don't think a very huge boost of performance will be helpfull for me. If I replace my 2007 Imac by a 2020, the boost will still be huge. I could probably run 10 times (at least) more tracks or plugins in LPX than with my 2.4 Ghz core2duo CPU. What if I could run 100 times more plugins with a silicon CPU ? It does not matter because I will never make a project with 500 tracks and 300 plugins ! I also wonder how will be the design of the silicon macs ? WIll the 2020 imac look outdated after this ? I wanted to buy a macbookpro but I was told it was not adviced to run a large monitor for a long time because the graphic card will not last for long. After 30 years of buying Macs, I have learnt that Apple are pretty brutal with transitions, remember they have only promised two years of support for Intel, so don't be surprised if you can't run the latest version of LPX in a few years on Intel Macs This may not be an issue for you but I like to stay on the latest version of macOS and LPX and want to buy hardware that can do this for 7+ years.
  14. I'm the guy who put the control surface file up 4 years ago. I can confirm that it still works with LPX 10.5.1 but please note I did not update firmware or use the Universal Control Software because it offered reduced functionality.
  15. By the end of year we should get an idea of how Apple Silicon can boost LPX performance, potentially a large leap in performance if Apple can leverage Apple Silicon for DSP duties. Everyone's circumstances are different, but I am looking to replace my 2012 iMac and 2015 MBP, hopefully with a 14" Apple Silicon MBP next year, given I already have a 32" monitor because I have to WFH with a Windows Laptop, it would be ideal to have one Mac rather than two. I have used Logic for 25 years, got to love the fact Apple develops LPX, macOS, Mac Hardware and now Apple Silicon
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