L
It's a really tactile device. Nice satisfying thunk where there are steps, indents could have a *touch* more resistance. Nice clicky clacky keys, all super robust.
Screens are super bright and clear, loads of information. values are on screen by touch and in use.
Firmware update went without a hitch, on Linux no less. They could put the Bitwig documentation on the website rather than bury it in the extension.
The minor niggle is that the big advantage Bitwig has always had over Live is the completely open device hierarchy, and there is no story of the navigation of that space (despite 8 buttons free in Remote Control mode), or of the (pretty recent) Track and Master Remotes.
Parsing it out, one of these, if you subtract what you'd pay for a licence, is about the same as a second hand Push 2 (here, anyway), with the advantage that it's a going concern, not wildly expensive for what it does, and they are making a general instrument for multiple DAWs and are keeping a broad contingent in view.
Screens are super bright and clear, loads of information. values are on screen by touch and in use.
Firmware update went without a hitch, on Linux no less. They could put the Bitwig documentation on the website rather than bury it in the extension.
The minor niggle is that the big advantage Bitwig has always had over Live is the completely open device hierarchy, and there is no story of the navigation of that space (despite 8 buttons free in Remote Control mode), or of the (pretty recent) Track and Master Remotes.
Parsing it out, one of these, if you subtract what you'd pay for a licence, is about the same as a second hand Push 2 (here, anyway), with the advantage that it's a going concern, not wildly expensive for what it does, and they are making a general instrument for multiple DAWs and are keeping a broad contingent in view.
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