Charles Newcomb
April 12th, 2012, 04:53 PM
I guess it was only a matter of time, anyway.
A few years ago I stopped buying PCs because I am not geeky enough to take care of them in a manner in which they have become accustomed to be taken care of. It seemed like every-other-month my machine wound up in the shop. So after hearing many stories of people switching to Mac for hardware and running Windows on them, I took the plunge. I've had two since the first one in 2007, and neither has ever been in the shop for repairs. And maybe it's just because I wanted it to be so, it also seemed like Vegas (which I've used since V3) ran better on the Mac.
I upgraded to Vegas 11 when it was released. It seemed to run okay to me, but I wasn't doing anything complicated at the time. Shortly thereafter they released the first update and things quickly got to where it was no longer any fun to work in Vegas. After a week of that, I asked Sony to refund my money, which they did.
I went back to Vegas 10e. Simultaneously, I tried Final Cut Pro X. I discovered it wasn't clunky like other versions of FInal Cut Pro. In fact, there are some intuitive, Vegas-like features. But since I've spent most of my editing time on Vegas and Avid, I was reluctant to get too much into FCPX.
That all changed when Vegas started to do clip substitutions and lock-ups I'd only read about previously. They drove me nuts for almost two weeks. That was it. It was time to look elsewhere. I went back to FCPX, this time after downloading some tutorials. Now I'm very comfortable with it. The fun has come back to editing. Long story short: This is my Sonic Foundry/Sony Vegas swan song.
I regret things having come to this. I will miss the editing system on which I spent so many years and did so many projects. I'll miss the great advice I always go in this forum. But a man's gotta do what a man's gotta do.
I wish all of you the best, and thank you for all the great tips.
If anyone wants a Vegas 10 license, email me a serious offer.
Charles
A few years ago I stopped buying PCs because I am not geeky enough to take care of them in a manner in which they have become accustomed to be taken care of. It seemed like every-other-month my machine wound up in the shop. So after hearing many stories of people switching to Mac for hardware and running Windows on them, I took the plunge. I've had two since the first one in 2007, and neither has ever been in the shop for repairs. And maybe it's just because I wanted it to be so, it also seemed like Vegas (which I've used since V3) ran better on the Mac.
I upgraded to Vegas 11 when it was released. It seemed to run okay to me, but I wasn't doing anything complicated at the time. Shortly thereafter they released the first update and things quickly got to where it was no longer any fun to work in Vegas. After a week of that, I asked Sony to refund my money, which they did.
I went back to Vegas 10e. Simultaneously, I tried Final Cut Pro X. I discovered it wasn't clunky like other versions of FInal Cut Pro. In fact, there are some intuitive, Vegas-like features. But since I've spent most of my editing time on Vegas and Avid, I was reluctant to get too much into FCPX.
That all changed when Vegas started to do clip substitutions and lock-ups I'd only read about previously. They drove me nuts for almost two weeks. That was it. It was time to look elsewhere. I went back to FCPX, this time after downloading some tutorials. Now I'm very comfortable with it. The fun has come back to editing. Long story short: This is my Sonic Foundry/Sony Vegas swan song.
I regret things having come to this. I will miss the editing system on which I spent so many years and did so many projects. I'll miss the great advice I always go in this forum. But a man's gotta do what a man's gotta do.
I wish all of you the best, and thank you for all the great tips.
If anyone wants a Vegas 10 license, email me a serious offer.
Charles