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Steinberg updates Nuendo to v5.1.1

Tuesday, February 8th, 2011

8th February 2011: Steinberg has released a new maintenance update for Nuendo 5, the native audio post-production solution. Nuendo 5.1.1 includes improvements for more stable program behavior as well as a faster operati…
AudioProFeeds-1

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What is the difference between Cubase and Nuendo?

Friday, October 29th, 2010

Question by Fritzbits: What is the difference between Cubase and Nuendo?
I’ve looked at both and they seem almost identical. I’ve heard Nuendo can be used for mastering, but by the looks of it, I could probably just do that in cubase. Is there something I’m missing?

Best answer:

Answer by Steve
For most of the home recordings and such (including mastering if your room is properly treated for sound) Cubase is fine. Nuendo gets into the more complicated tasks like running a network of computers for a recording session. Imagine a large 10 piece band running at once with multiple rooms for tracking and mixing the audio. There is an engineer working on the horns while another engineer at another computer is working on the drums and so on. Stick with Cubase, it’s a great program.

What do you think? Answer below!

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Steinberg updates Nuendo to v5.1

Thursday, October 14th, 2010

14th October 2010: Steinberg has released the second update for its Nuendo 5 post, live and audio production solution. The Nuendo 5.1 update adds MXF Audio support, as well as several stability and performance improvem…
AudioProFeeds-1

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Steinberg Nuendo 5

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

Whereas Cubase has long been a staple product for computer musicians, those working in post-production for film, TV and radio are more likely to turn to its sibling, Nuendo. The two apps are superficially similar, but each has its own exclusive features.

Post-production is where music, sound effects, actors’ dialogue, etc, are compiled into a finished stream of audio in a specific format – it might be in surround sound, too.

This is where Nuendo steps in, with features such as extensive surround support (up to 12 speakers), pro video and sync functionality, import/export of a wider range of formats, and network collaboration.

“Surround Panner v5 makes the previous effort look chunky.”

Traditionally, certain features in Nuendo have filtered through to Cubase (and vice versa), and in fact, there are a few things in Nuendo 5 that are also in the recent free Cubase 5.5 update.

Of course, here we’ll focus on the musical side of Nuendo 5.

Dialogue box

The Cubase/Nuendo MediaBay is something that, until now, hasn’t really clicked with us. The idea is that you use it to index all the relevant data (audio, MIDI, projects, plug-in presets, etc) on your drives, so that you can browse, filter and preview it all at your leisure.

It’s been overhauled for Nuendo 5 (and Cubase 5.5) and we’re pleased to say, it’s really making more sense now. The layout has been refined and it just seems more logical and friendly, not to mention swifter overall, making it something we actually want to use.

You need to tag all your data for it to be of much use, but that chore could well be worth the effort for post-production houses. Also new are Clip Packages, whereby you select a bunch of related audio clips and export them – you can later pull them from the MediaBay to recreate the original structure of clips.

Many music producers create beats with samples on audio tracks, and we found Clip Packages to be a great way of stashing away such ‘composite beats’ for later use.

New in the mixer is the Wave Meters view, which shows a visual recreation of the clips on the audio tracks scrolling upwards. It doesn’t show the channel’s output data, though, and while that does mean you can see what’s coming up in advance, it still feels like an underdeveloped idea – you can’t adjust the speed or scrub by dragging, for instance.

Next up is Direct Routing, enabling you to designate eight possible output destinations for each channel, and then flick between them with a single click. You can switch multiple channels at once, and even select multiple destinations, and it’s all automatable.

It works nicely (aside from a momentary level increase during the change), though you can’t set a level offset for each output. Note that you can now arm multiple channels for recording too.

Just drive!

There’s a new pitchshifter plug-in, Pitch Driver, with a claimed range of “up to 24 semitones”, but while you can go two octaves down, it seems you can only pitch up by one.

(2 pages; go to page: 2)



Read more here:
Steinberg Nuendo 5

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Steinberg updates Nuendo to v5.0.1

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010

6th July 2010: Steinberg has released the first maintenance update for its latest post, live and audio production software Nuendo 5. “Our commitment towards our valued customers is to offer service updates more f…

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Steinberg updates Nuendo to v5.0.1

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Steinberg launches Nuendo 5

Monday, May 24th, 2010

24th May 2010: Steinberg has announced that Nuendo 5 will be available from authorized Steinberg dealers from June 2010. Supporting Mac OS X 10.5 and 10.6 as well as Windows 7, Vista and XP, Nuendo 5 will cost EUR17…

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Steinberg launches Nuendo 5

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Steinberg announces Nuendo 5 Tour

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

20th April 2010: Steinberg has announced that, with the advent of releasing its new advanced post, live and audio production system, it is presenting Nuendo 5 at certified Nuendo dealers and well-known post-production…

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Steinberg announces Nuendo 5 Tour

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Wave Editor Competition Lives, with WaveLab 7 for PC … and Mac

Thursday, March 25th, 2010

Let’s get this out of the way right at the beginning: dedicated audio editors are important. For sound design, for tweaking audio assets, and for just getting close to your sounds, editing waveforms in a DAW often doesn’t cut it.

That’s made a lot of Mac users unhappy, because it’s one of the few areas where the Mac platform lags seriously behind Windows in available choice. Windows users have been spoiled by choices like Sound Forge (now Sony), Adobe Audition, and Steinberg WaveLab, all three excellent editors that are functional and fast to work with. The Mac, meanwhile, has been all about BIAS Peak. And Peak has been divisive: some users love it, but others want an alternative. Possible choices like Adobe Soundbooth and Apple Soundtrack Pro, while useful in their own workflows, haven’t caught on with audio editors. (One notable “underground” choice is the favorite of many CDM readers – Audiofile Engineering’s Wave Editor – a smaller name, but I doubt WaveLab will shake the loyalty of its devoted users.)

Steinberg bringing WaveLab to the Mac is already turning a few heads, particularly among recent PC-to-Mac converts. (Even on Windows, with Adobe Audition having fallen behind, WaveLab may gain some ground.)

Don’t think it’s big news? Have a look at recent Facebook and Twitter activity and other chatter over the announcement. Amongst the elite sound design lovers, WaveLab is the news of the week. That’s a small group of people (as any of the developers of these apps will readily tell you), but they also have a big impact on the sound of media today.

The reworked interface still has a last-generation feel, but on the other hand, it’s functionality over form that defines this category. I’m still waiting to see some more material details, but Steinberg at least has a preview of what’s new in 7. Wading through their PR materials, I translate that to include:

WaveLab’s new multi-window, dockable interface and toolbar – though, uh, naturally I expect you wouldn’t open all these windows at once. (I can only imagine what would happen if Steinberg submitted this screenshot to my editor at Macworld.
  • A new workspace UI built around dockable, scalable multiple windows and customizable toolbar. (I hate toolbars, so I may customize it by … turning it off. To each their own, though.)
  • “Ground-up” re-engineering effort to support cross-platform Mac and Windows code (based on past experience, that may benefit the engineering on the Windows side, too)
  • New VST3 restoration tools developed by Sonnox, including DeNoizer, DeBuzzer, DeClicker, and plug-ins gathered from Steinberg’s pro audio line, including the Nuendo Post Filter.
  • New CD and DVD-A burning engine.

The inclusion of mastering and burning materials really puts this right opposite Peak – and for those of you who didn’t even bother with Peak, could fill in some key gaps in suites like Logic Studio (in case you aren’t a fan of Apple’s editor and burning tools).

I’m not a WaveLab user, though it’s always been a program I respected from a distance. So if you are an old-hat WaveLab lover, do get in touch; we may need to you to review the new release when it ships.

WaveLab 7 preview at Steinberg

Go here to read the rest:
Wave Editor Competition Lives, with WaveLab 7 for PC … and Mac

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Wave Editor Competition Lives, with WaveLab 7 for PC … and Mac

Thursday, March 25th, 2010

Let’s get this out of the way right at the beginning: dedicated audio editors are important. For sound design, for tweaking audio assets, and for just getting close to your sounds, editing waveforms in a DAW often doesn’t cut it.

That’s made a lot of Mac users unhappy, because it’s one of the few areas where the Mac platform lags seriously behind Windows in available choice. Windows users have been spoiled by choices like Sound Forge (now Sony), Adobe Audition, and Steinberg WaveLab, all three excellent editors that are functional and fast to work with. The Mac, meanwhile, has been all about BIAS Peak. And Peak has been divisive: some users love it, but others want an alternative. Possible choices like Adobe Soundbooth and Apple Soundtrack Pro, while useful in their own workflows, haven’t caught on with audio editors. (One notable “underground” choice is the favorite of many CDM readers – Audiofile Engineering’s Wave Editor – a smaller name, but I doubt WaveLab will shake the loyalty of its devoted users.)

Steinberg bringing WaveLab to the Mac is already turning a few heads, particularly among recent PC-to-Mac converts. (Even on Windows, with Adobe Audition having fallen behind, WaveLab may gain some ground.)

Don’t think it’s big news? Have a look at recent Facebook and Twitter activity and other chatter over the announcement. Amongst the elite sound design lovers, WaveLab is the news of the week. That’s a small group of people (as any of the developers of these apps will readily tell you), but they also have a big impact on the sound of media today.

The reworked interface still has a last-generation feel, but on the other hand, it’s functionality over form that defines this category. I’m still waiting to see some more material details, but Steinberg at least has a preview of what’s new in 7. Wading through their PR materials, I translate that to include:

WaveLab’s new multi-window, dockable interface and toolbar – though, uh, naturally I expect you wouldn’t open all these windows at once. (I can only imagine what would happen if Steinberg submitted this screenshot to my editor at Macworld.
  • A new workspace UI built around dockable, scalable multiple windows and customizable toolbar. (I hate toolbars, so I may customize it by … turning it off. To each their own, though.)
  • “Ground-up” re-engineering effort to support cross-platform Mac and Windows code (based on past experience, that may benefit the engineering on the Windows side, too)
  • New VST3 restoration tools developed by Sonnox, including DeNoizer, DeBuzzer, DeClicker, and plug-ins gathered from Steinberg’s pro audio line, including the Nuendo Post Filter.
  • New CD and DVD-A burning engine.

The inclusion of mastering and burning materials really puts this right opposite Peak – and for those of you who didn’t even bother with Peak, could fill in some key gaps in suites like Logic Studio (in case you aren’t a fan of Apple’s editor and burning tools).

I’m not a WaveLab user, though it’s always been a program I respected from a distance. So if you are an old-hat WaveLab lover, do get in touch; we may need to you to review the new release when it ships.

WaveLab 7 preview at Steinberg

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Wave Editor Competition Lives, with WaveLab 7 for PC … and Mac

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Steinberg ships Nuendo SyncStation Synchronizer Solution

Thursday, January 14th, 2010

14th January 2010: Steinberg has announced it is shipping a benchmark-setting new hardware sync solution for almost any production situation: Nuendo SyncStation. Nuendo SyncStation is a solidly-built 19 rack-mount uni…

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Steinberg ships Nuendo SyncStation Synchronizer Solution

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