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| quote: | Originally posted by Richard v W
I think it's save to assume DAWs like ableton live and logic both use 32 bit floats. So they sum the same way? Has anybody really ever heard any difference in ableton or logic (or any other daw) summing, or is it just a myth really? |
Interesting topic. You'll never get a conclusive answer because the algorithms involved are probably trade secrets. Who know's what's going on under the hood of these programs really.
There are a few elements that contribute to the different sounds you hear coming out of logic and ableton (for example) and summing isn't everything. Its also got a lot to do with internal effects, pan laws, dithering and sample rate conversion.
I don't know about Jarrell's workflow, but a lot of people consider things like EQ and compression to be a part of their DAW. If he's including things like that, then I'm sure logic would sound different to ableton.
Pan laws are another aspect, logic has different pan laws available, while ableton only uses the one, and doesn't overtly tell you how its handling panning either afaik. Ableton also uses a strange SRC algorithm, its completely different to any other DAWs because it goes for a completely different phase/steepness tradeoff than the others. Ableton recommends you use an external SRC program (izotope has one) for final release, so I'd guess they don't have complete faith in their program's ability to do that.
Overall, renders betweeen different DAWs null to well below -90 dBfs, so I'd be amazed if you could hear a difference technically. But I'm sure there are other factors at play including workflow, built in plugins and default settings that make a difference.
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