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Heres my oppinions:
Macs: Stable, but expensive
Experience: Every now and then at Uni.
The benefit of having uniform hardware platforms is obvious. Macs totally win in the stability department because of this. Also, the quality standards of Apple are far higher than that of PC OEMs.
PC: Greater choice and cheaper, but less dependable
Experience: From birth!
PCs don't "just go". Sure, it does all come down to the knowledge of the user, but I'm talking in general. If you think about it logically, the open platform that is the PC has a significantly higher risk of problems.
I use PCs because that's what I have always used. I build them myself so I get them for stupidly low prices. Being in the IT industry, I'm capable of looking after it myself, so the cost of a Mac is unjustified for me. That said, it is cheaper than ever to get into Logic. Once you weigh up the price difference in buying PC+Windows+Cubase vs. Mac+Logic, Mac would seem the better deal. I would probably buy a Mac if I was going to buy a new computer tomorrow.
FL Studio:
Experience: ~3-4 years (on and off with Cubase)
The step sequencing paradigm is awesome. FL is great for programming drums, slicing up loops and doing all kinds of neat tricks that no other sequencer can do in the same way (peak controllers etc.). Other sequencers do have step sequencers, but they arent the basis of the program like this. Downside is the audio recording and editing is horrible.
Cubase:
Experience: 2-3 years (on and off with FL)
If a VST doesn't work in Cubase, it generally doesn't work full stop. Loads of features; probably the best audio editing of any DAW I've used. Downside is that the user interface is a piece of shit and the program is bloated with stupid features (MediaBay, etc.), while legitimate features go unrecognised (stereo rewire, sidechaining).
SONAR:
Experience: 1 month (it was painful)
Basically Cubase with a few cutting edge features. Cakewalk seem to lead the way in terms of innovation and they have close ties with Microsoft so you know Vista isn't going to bite you in the ass. Downside is that the GUI is even worse than Cubase.
Live:
Experience: 1 month (I actually almost used Live as my main DAW)
Performance mode is pretty cool, but I dont think the sequencing and audio editing are at the same level as Cubase. This is also probably the most innefficient DAW I have used, in terms of resource usage. That said, the UI is fantastic IMO. Everything is right where you need it and it's akin to FL Studio in terms of cutting loops up and doing all kinds of creative tricks.
Reaper:
Experience: 8 months
Simple, fast, and lightweight. The installer is like 3mb, yet it has all the important functions of all the major DAWs. The routing system in Reaper is far better than any other DAW I have used. The biggest benefit of Reaper is the workflow. You can fit absolutely every important button on your screen at once. You have absolutely no hope of doing this in Live, Cubase, SONAR or FL. In fact, I'd go as far as saying that Cubase and SONAR are practically un-usable on a single screen. The next thing is the workflow. Reaper has no tools whatsoever. No draw tool, no erase tool, no slice tool. It is hard to get your head around it at first, but once you realise how much time you waste swapping in between tools, you start to love it. Everything is so quick and easy to do that I can't handle using anything else anymore. Downside is that some VSTs are still a bit dodgy. Also, the actual LOOK of the user interface is not very nice. You can get skins for it, but I haven't found one I like yet. It also doesn't have some features that other DAWs have. I don't know what they are though, because I've never had to use them. Reaper is $40 to buy.
I use Reaper for the reasons above. Also, the community is great. When a problem is found, the developer (Justin - the inventor of Winamp) will practically fix them overnight. Reaper gets updated once a week or more. If growth continues as it is, this program will easily surpass anything else out there.
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