Why is Reaper not the generally accepted professional DAW of choice . . . right now reaper is my best daw of choice on my windows maybe i might try logic later but still i will use reaper even together with logic because its very customizable and easy to use with less problematic i can pretty much do anything i would like to do reaper has all the mixing and mastering stock plug ins ready upon installation
Is Reaper really free somewhere? : r audioengineering - Reddit I have clients who often ask me for free DAW recommendations and I'd love to be able to recommend Reaper if there is actually a free version of it somewhere I currently do mention it as a paid option, but I don't really feel comfortable recommending it as a free option unless there really is an unlimited, unrestricted, free-forever version
Is Reaper a good choice for music making as a beginner? : r Reaper - Reddit Reaper is the 3rd DAW I've used over the past 20 years and it's easily the least user friendly for me My previous DAWs (old versions of cubase, Tracktion Waveform free) were a lot more intuitive It's a good DAW, efficient, reliable etc and I'm fairly happy with it but I'm still struggling after using it for a few months and it feels like it
Reaper is NOT free, and you may NOT use it forever without . . . - Reddit Reaper is NOT free, and it says that very clearly on the Cockos website It says that very clearly in the program itself It's $60 (or $225 if you're using it in a high-volume enough studio), which is nothing compared to $700 for Pro Tools Please, please stop suggesting Reaper as a "forever free" DAW
What happens after 60 days trial ? : r Reaper - Reddit I used Reaper for quite a while without paying But there comes a point where you just realise what a superb piece of software it is and how valuable developers like Cockos are I saw paying for Reaper as almost an investment for me Also, Reaper has been in existence for many years
Reaper - Why do people choose to use that over the other DAWs I initially discovered Reaper, in my search for an application that could deal with multiple live MIDI I o concurrently(put simply, I wanted to play different VSTi from my MIDI keyboard controller electronic drumkit simultaneously) Reaper was the only DAW at the time(2008 9), which could manage that in any meaningful way
Reducing latency : r Reaper - Reddit One example is a fft based filter, or a compressor with lookahead value I think these plugins report to reaper how much in advance they need to know the sound, and Reaper introduces latency accordingly (otherwose the sounds would go out of sync!) So yeah, check different effects to see if any of them introduce their own latency
Best daw controller for reaper : r Reaper - Reddit I switched to Reaper about 5 months ago from 6 years on FL Studio, my first DAW, and have since customized the sh*t out of Reaper to the point where I have 8 custom toolbars, divided by what areas of the DAW they operate (Track visibility controls, global transport controls, theme adjuster, track group controls, pre-configured render options
Reaper vs Abelton Live : r Reaper - Reddit Reaper is more of a traditional DAW and is very linear in its control and layout You can definitely record and mix in Ableton, and you can definitely trigger samples from Reaper - but one will be better than the other at different tasks
If Reaper was your first DAW, how long did it take you to get . . . - Reddit If Reaper was my first DAW, I would probably stop composing (came from GarageBand first) because how unattractive—for me—the UI looks and so complicated Thankfully, after running through any other DAW (Studio One, Ableton, n Logic); I find myself in a crossroad where I chose Reaper cause I know what I want in a DAW