L. A. Stone said:
You're naming off stuff that no one is using and no one is even considering using and using that as a justification of how far software has come.
Now that is just plain silly. In my opinion, of course
L. A. Stone said:
I've never read an article where some was using GigaStudio, that didn't have a setup involving several computers at least
I've read several. For instance, Electronic Musician, May 2005: "With a high-end Pentium 4 and a separate, fast drive for your samples, you can reasonably expect to get hundreds of notes of polyphony. (Tascam claims that many users have reported polyphony levels well beyond 400 notes.) That makes it feasible for the first time to assemble and play back large-scale orchestral arrangements on a single machine."
L. A. Stone said:
And I believe you're misleading people about how much they can expect to pay for a GigaStudio setup.
I believe I'm not. But then again, I believe all this believing stuff is quite subjective. (Eh.) First of all, the naming ("Solo", "Ensemble", "Orchestra") is all about the polyphony of the software. You can very well pick up the 240 euro "Ensemble" version if you can live with a puny 160 note polyphony

and after that, target a good part of your investment to such particular instrument sounds that you consider critical in the kind of music you personally make. Oh, by the way, there's also a built-in high quality convolution reverb included for generating acoustic spaces based on impulse responses.
All that being said, you can assemble even a completely separate Gigastudio rig for standalone operation very economically these days -- and that's why many people indeed still do exactly that.
As a sidenote, a quote from AudioMIDI.com: "I am pleased to say that the import in Kontakt 2 is vastly improved, especially in the GigaSampler import, and this is no small feat as it means mapping many, many parameters from one program to another. But programs imported into Kontakt keep the liveliness of the original programs." I assume you have at least seen Kontakt and Kontakt 2 being used quite often, even if you haven't come across Gigastudio users? And yes, Kontakt 2, also sporting convolution operations and a horde of other sound shaping features, is all in all a great example of the possibilities of software today.
Enough about Gigastudio & co in
a Hypersonic thread on my part, however.
You are already coming up with secondary justifications instead of talking about
the actual sound of software, by the way. To recap, my intention was only to debunk the old ideas about the sounds of software solutions, especially about them a) being inherently less responsive to performance control and b) commonly lacking in realism and presence. That's all I wanted to do, and now I've done it. Anyone can draw their own conclusions based on these posts -- and if someone is suddenly inspired to do more research on their own, without the old presuppositions, I very much encourage them to do so.
After all, it's not an either/or choice, it's about realizing the sounds you're personally after, it's all very interesting and it can only make your options broader. Yay! Take care
