To power the keyboard, you need to plug in the grey USB connector.
Cubase nuendo full#
In addition, the ASTRA 2 has a full-sized F-row and multimedia keys to provide full control and effectiveness. The ASTRA 2 keyboard is developed with two USB cables a grey one for the keyboard itself, and a black one for the USB hub to avoid problems with installations, that require a KVM extender. mouse, phone, contour shuttle or a USB-dongle. The keyboard features a USB 3.0* hub to enable you to connect e.g. With five selectable light levels, the ASTRA 2 is the perfect choice for any lighting conditions. The ASTRA 2 backlit keyboard features an elegant, black keyboard with low-profile scissor-switch keys for a light, yet responsive feel. I only pay if I think it's worth it and if there's an introductory offer or whatever.ASTRA 2 keyboard for Steinberg Cubase & Nuendo
Cubase nuendo update#
x if it's a paid update - but I almost never pay just to be on the latest version. I find that for the most part I can do what I need with the major updates and if I really need something for work it's easily worth the cost to update to. I honestly can't remember the last time I paid for that though.
If there are a lot of new features or they are big enough then they sometimes charge a small fee. The first two may be more maintenance and not so much focused on added features, and then the 11.x update may have some features added. So most of the updates to Nuendo are free updates that go from say 11.0.0 to 11.0.1 to11.0.2. It doesn't really matter what the number says (it never really does) but what's in it. I'm not positive if the above is a fair assessment, however.Basically the way to look at these "fractional" updates is in my opinion by taking into account what is in them. When spending that much I want to make sure that I make the right purchase decision, but I also don't want to regret not getting Nuendo at a 40% discount should I later decide that that's what I really need.Īs far as the upgrades and cost goes, I seem to remember reading that some of the smaller incremental upgrades for Nuendo are free and only the larger upgrades cost, so if you average it out over a year or so, the cost of maintaining NuEndo and Cubase is much closer than it would otherwise seem. The first and last replies seemed to be the most comprehensive: This is the best explanation of the advantages that I've found so far, but it dpesn't discuss any of NuEndo's short-comings over Cubase, if there still are any. How much of that stuff will apply to NuEndo? Can I take a Cubase course and still follow along in NuEndo with small modifications, or will that be very difficult?
Cubase nuendo software#
Is that still true? Are there other reasons (VST support, MIDI editing, notation software integration, etc.) why I might want to consider Cubase over NuEndo? I have a lot of training marterials available to me for Cubase. was nowhere near the level of what Cubase was at the time. I know that the last time I used NuEndo, it's MIDI editing, etc. If I decide to purchase NuEndo over Cubase, is there anything that I would be missing? I'm curious as to why folks like Hans Zimmer uses Cubase over NuEndo other than it's what he is used to. This, however, is the least of my concerns.
Cubase nuendo Pc#
on a separate PC from my main DAW PC (beefy, fast server with 96GB of RAM, SSD, etc.), so IDK if one handles that better than the other or not? I'd also be interested in remote control options via iPad - I know that there are such options for Cubase, not sure if those work with NuEndo. I think both handle it, but I will have sample libraries, etc.
Initially I will be doing mostly your standard audio recording stuff, but eventually will be moving to film and tv composition.
The last time I used NuEndo I *think* it was version 4. I did a search and didn't see anything wrt these latest versions.