![]() ![]() Interesting tidbits: working with Intel, Cakewalk was able to do a demo of SONAR running an absurd number of tracks, instruments, effects, and live video without pegging the CPU, with a tiny 2 ms of latency. Apparently, some people care deeply about whether this is SONAR 9 or 8.5 or some conspiracy theory there, but what interests me is the technical details of the software itself. Noel Borthwick talks about all the details of the new SONAR release on the Cakewalk forums. Okay, what was this post originally about? Oh, yeah – the actual technical details of the SONAR 8.5 release. And I’ll have to pronounce all those hard g’s in the voice over, clearly.Īnd no, this is not some twisted viral campaign on the part of the folks of Cakewalk I’ve been assured that this came from a user. I’m going to take that as a challenge and base my review of SONAR 8.5 on using an arpeggiator and step sequencer on every track. Yes, I came from the days of one-finger piano playing. The arpeggiator is now on every track, so you are supposed to use it. Prompted by the posting of technical details for a new update to Cakewalk’s SONAR production software for Windows, and empowered by a strange, new tool that generates eerie virtual reality from typed text, we get banter like this: What happens when you mix technical chatter on the Cakewalk forum, Samuel Beckett, and The Matrix? I’d wager you get something like the surreal video above.
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