To get to Reaper, I quit Cubase 5, discovered Podium a few days before Reaper and bought both. I didn't find OHM far different than Reaper. You can't send your collab a frozen track, since there is no guarantee of having all the same plugins on the other end. I suppose OHM has to have 'quick bounce'. I'll be watching to see how this whole scheme works out. Yet I believe the lowest 'deal' is for free use at present. That's if you use it in its on-line capacity, and rates vary as to how much use and length of subscription. I don't much care for the several different subscription rates for it. I think it will attract a solid following and get lots of use. As regards the DAW itself, I really like the look of it and felt it would have a good work flow, and can see it as another good and inexpensive newcomer. There are a couple of other cases, too, but can't remember which. It wasn't long after I saw Ohmforce's beta that Cableguys Curve2 showed up on the scene, with its online community setup for preset posting and exchange (another collab situation for which I have little interest but do think the synth is well above average). What got my interest in the first place was the emerging trend of doing work with others online in real time (again, as I said, not personally interested in doing this). Now they are saying that the next big bugfix/further-tweaking release will be better suited to be optional as to whether anyone wants to simply use it off-line or not. I recall it didn't crash or present any issues, although I only ran the thing for 2 or 3 hours. I was pretty impressed overall, but I didn't have any interest in doing the online collab thing then, and I don't now, either. They offered it to demo quite a few months ago and I gave it a quick try then.
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