|
I agree that Audio Ease has a right to protect the process that they developed. However, it's kind of silly to try to regulate the end-user.
They should be going after the software developers that make c-reverbs which can use these same IR's. I assume that they ARe doing this, and that they have a patent on the process itself. (I hope so. they certainly deserve to reap the rewards of their R&D.) -but going after a sound developer seems like an impossible, un-enforceable task.
It does raise interesting legal questions.
-----------------------------------------------
As for the original question, revibe is absolutely amazing. I did a number of the factory presets, and have been mixing with it for a few months now. It has almost completely replaced my TC 6000 and Lex 480. Seriously.
AND it runs at true 96K, with no up-sampling.
Massive coolness abounds....
When it becomes available, by all means check it out. (Accel card required)
I'm also loving the (soon to be released) TLL c-reverb. Great parameter control for this type of reverb.
|