I thought (and still think) routing in SAM is more straightforward than in, say, Pro-tools or Logic but routing in Reaper is a BREEZE: if you can think it you can do it. but Reaper has hundreds of them and utilities of any kind! (not so good looking though)Įditing in SAM is absolutely killer, but Reaper holds up well and you can configure it so it behaves like YOU want.įor example my customization of Reaper reflects how I was used to work in SAM. Sure, SAM has dozens of great stock plugins. Forget about any virtual instrument, you can bring your own One minute and you are ready to go on any computer. Just to add to what junh1024 wrote, here's a quick comparison between the two.įirst thing you notice about Reaper is how small can a DAW installation be and still deliver a fully functional DAW. The switch wasn't hard at all, what took me the most time was customizing Reaper to my needs (yes, this DAW adapts to YOU!) You can see by using it that developers really listen to the users community! Recently i switched entirely to Reaper, and I don't miss SAM at all. In the last few years I tried Reaper many times until I fell in love with it and its philosophy. then SAM wasn't my n☁ choice anymore, mainly because of stability issues. While I was growing as a producer and a mixer, I've grown dissatisfied with SAM as projects got bigger, with more intricate routings, with more demanding plugins. I've been using Samplitude since its name was SEK'D Samplitude 2496 up to Pro X2.
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