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You know the drill. There’s a new operating system from Apple. It breaks some music software. If you don’t like things breaking, you should wait a bit. Then once you’ve verified the stuff you need is compatible, go for it – it’s probably better than the last OS once the wrinkles are ironed out.

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This post occurs with each new OS, a bit like some sites do Holiday Shopping Guides, or April Fools’ jokes. I could almost turn it into a Mad Libs post.

But here are the specifics. The operating system: OS X 10.11 “El Capitan.” What breaks: plug-ins, mainly. Some Audio Unit plug-ins don’t pass validation.

We’ve heard that from Native Instruments and Arturia already. Arturia says they’ve seen issues with standalone software, too. Either way, we’re talking software qualification. And I suspect we’ll hear from more developers through the day, not just Arturia and NI (feel free to sound off in comments). Check hardware, too. Here, we only have heard from NI, but it’s a huge issue – kernel panics with the MK1 editions of Traktor Kontrol S4, X1, Traktor Audio 2, and Maschine, plus the Audio 2/4/8 DJ and Guitar Rig 3 Rig Kontrol 3 hardware. Meanwhile, Elektron say their Overbridge tech isn’t quite working with 10.11 yet, either.

(Their hardware is fine, but not with all the integration features.) The good news here – in NI’s case, at least, there are already beta drivers. I’m all set to use my VST versions of my plug-ins and Maschine in glorious monochromatic orange. Back in my day, Apple never used to have OS upgrade quality issues. Why have they abandoned pros? Ah, too true. I remember the golden days, back in Yosemite, OS X East Bay, OS X Delayed BART train, 10.6, 10.5, 10.4.8, 10.3, Mac OS X Puma, Mac OS X Llama, Mac OS X Rabid Kitten Beta 3, System 8, System 7.5.3 revision 2, System 7.blergh, System 6, PowerBook 5300 On Fire, Apple III Drop It On A Table Until It Starts Working no problems whatsoever.

Everything “just worked,” back when Steve Jobs was with us and I used my Mac Classic at school which I went to and from uphill in the snow both ways even in September, until the sad day when Gibson bought Studio Vision Pro and killed Christmas forever and the End Times were nigh. Okay, no, seriously: Will this get fixed? Yes, and if past OS updates are any indication, reasonably quickly.

Just sit tight. Kirk in Star Trek V climbs the mountain El Capitan, in Yosemite Park (each a namesake of an OS X update now). Also, spoiler alert: Kirk falls. So before you make “love to the mountain,” be aware of the risks, and make sure Spock catches you. I mean, uh, make sure you have a backup before you upgrade.

Backup first. I’m not preaching abstinence; I’m saying use protection. Make a backup first.

That was tasteless, sorry – but I think I’ve written this story ten times in the history of CDM, so you can expect the quality to degrade as I age. 😉 Updated: when you are ready, here’s four hours of Shatner while you wait on your machine to backup and upgrade. Updated: Add notation software and UI problems to this list.

Via CDM comments – thanks, Wheat! “we’ve discovered some new incompatibilities with Finale 2014d. Specifically, opening certain dialog boxes (involving expressions, articulations, and others) can cause Finale to crash. At this point we advise against upgrading to El Capitan immediately upon its release.

If the solution is on our end we will address it with Finale 2014.5, which we plan to release by the end of November”. OSes are so stable now, I suppose its more like trying to pick your favorite season of the Simpsons: either you go with early seasons/updates that are consistent and stripped down or you go with later seasons/updates that occasionally have a great new characters/features but otherwise are just tinkering with the current formula. Un Poco Loca Jowell Y Randy Free Mp3 Download. I’ll just never forget OSX made it immediately easier to get all my interfaces to work together. One day i’m struggling with drivers and the next day everything worked. It was a festivus miracle. OSes are so stable now, I suppose its more like trying to pick your favorite season of the Simpsons: either you go with early seasons/updates that are consistent and stripped down or you go with later seasons/updates that occasionally have a great new characters/features but otherwise are just tinkering with the current formula.

I’ll just never forget OSX made it immediately easier to get all my interfaces to work together. One day i’m struggling with drivers and the next day everything worked. It was a festivus miracle. Developers have had 8 betas plus a GM to start testing but once again, people beat up on Apple when it’s really the developers who’ve been slacking off since June. Apple specifically pushes out prelease releases—8 of them in fact plus a GM— so developers aren’t blindsided when the final version is released.

It’s funny when people say “Apple doesn’t listen” but those same developers never participate in the betas until it’s all firmed up. It’s really a missed opportunity to instill some confidence in your customers as well as riding the wave of “hey we’re ready to go on El Cap! We’re proactive!” Even Adobe, hated by many, has certified their apps to go for El Capitan. People slated Adobe on this years ago and they’ve finally listened.

Same song and dance every year; I think corporate culture has something to do with it. They’d rather be reactive than proactive. “Let’s wait to see how many complaints we get before we start digging into this” Especially if you’re relatively close to a new release, “why spend time working on old code when you can sell new code to customers” says marketing. It used to be only the biggest developers could get access to prerelease seeds which was the biggest problem.

You’d have to wait until a public beta to even start testing. Now anyone who spends $100 on a developer subscription gets access to every release of iOS and OS X. By the third or 4th beta, all the major changes or bugs in APIs are pretty well settled in.

The betas are there to chase edge case bugs in the new APIs. Developers have had 8 betas plus a GM to start testing but once again, people beat up on Apple when it’s really the developers who’ve been slacking off since June. Apple specifically pushes out prelease releases so developers aren’t blindsided when the final version is released. It’s funny when people say “Apple doesn’t listen” but those same developers probably never participate in the betas until it’s close to firmed up. It’s really a missed opportunity to instill some confidence in your customers as well as riding the wave of “hey we’re ready to go on El Cap! We’re proactive!” Even Adobe, hated by many, has certified their apps to go for El Capitan.

People slated Adobe on this years ago and they’ve finally listened. Especially considering Apple is billing this as more of a refined, maintenance release without that many features, users are going to expect that it’s going to be a safer upgrade and go ahead with it. Same song and dance every year; I think corporate culture has something to do with it. They’d rather be reactive than proactive. “Let’s wait to see how many complaints we get before we start digging into this” Especially if you’re relatively close to a new release, “why spend time working on old code when you can sell new code to customers” says marketing. It used to be only the biggest developers could get access to prerelease seeds which was the biggest problem. You’d have to wait until a public beta to even start testing.

Now anyone who spends $100 on a developer subscription gets access to every release of iOS and OS X. By the third or 4th beta, all the major changes or bugs in APIs are pretty well settled in. The betas are there to chase edge case bugs in the new APIs. Damn you, El Capitan.

A warning to all: this has broken Logic Pro for me. I’m now experiencing crackling with my NI Audio Kontrol 1 (no surprises there, it’s an annual affair with a new OS) but worse, frequent crashes of Logic.

Apparently as soon as I try to open third party instruments – particularly Izotope’s iDrum – it freaks everything out. Then that project file is rendered totally unusable and I have to choose a backup. I KNOW I KNOW don’t upgrade. But I was tempted by the claims of better graphical performance, which has been dogging my Logic Pro sessions for a while. I have no recourse. Damn you, El Capitan.

A warning to all: this has broken Logic Pro for me. I’m now experiencing crackling with my NI Audio Kontrol 1 (no surprises there, it’s an annual affair with a new OS) but worse, frequent crashes of Logic. Apparently as soon as I try to open third party instruments – particularly Izotope’s iDrum – it freaks everything out. Then that project file is rendered totally unusable and I have to choose a backup. I KNOW I KNOW don’t upgrade.

But I was tempted by the claims of better graphical performance, which has been dogging my Logic Pro sessions for a while. I have no recourse. Ran into problems with the drivers for the US-144 MK II: while audio works, the system becomes repeatedly unresponsive even under normal use (not even using audio software).

Looking at the OSX console, it appears that hundreds of errors are being generated every second. I have taken a screenshot: This keep scrolling by continuously whenever the Tascam device is plugged in. Removing the driver or unplugging the device causes the errors to stop and the system to become more responsive. Re-installing the driver or plugging the device back in causes the errors to resume and the system to become less responsive again. Just thought I’d mention this to save others the trouble of finding out.

Having the Tascam unit plugged in makes your system nearly unusable. Ran into problems with the drivers for the US-144 MK II: while audio works, the system becomes repeatedly unresponsive even under normal use (not even using audio software). Looking at the OSX console, it appears that hundreds of errors are being generated every second. I have taken a screenshot: This keep scrolling by continuously whenever the Tascam device is plugged in. Removing the driver or unplugging the device causes the errors to stop and the system to become more responsive. Re-installing the driver or plugging the device back in causes the errors to resume and the system to become less responsive again.

Just thought I’d mention this to save others the trouble of finding out. Having the Tascam unit plugged in makes your system nearly unusable. IZotope RX 2.0 works again in 10.11.1 (crashed instantly in 10.11.0). Complete Linux Installer Key Apk Free Download there. Logic Pro 9 is also working fine here so far, but I haven’t tried a lot in it except to make sure I can record and input MIDI (didn’t try it in 10.11.0, though) and my old PreSonus Inspire 1394 (with FW400) also works fine on my old 2008 Macbook Pro I use for portable recording. I’ve had some trouble my Midiman 2×2 Anniversary Edition, though. If I boot with it plugged in, it works OK. If I hot plug it, it will not be recognized by the OS, including after booting with it (i.e.

Unplugging it and then plugging it back in). I’ve sent feedback to Apple (not sure it will do any good). IZotope RX 2.0 works again in 10.11.1 (crashed instantly in 10.11.0). Logic Pro 9 is also working fine here so far, but I haven’t tried a lot in it except to make sure I can record and input MIDI (didn’t try it in 10.11.0, though) and my old PreSonus Inspire 1394 (with FW400) also works fine on my old 2008 Macbook Pro I use for portable recording. I’ve had some trouble my Midiman 2×2 Anniversary Edition, though. If I boot with it plugged in, it works OK. If I hot plug it, it will not be recognized by the OS, including after booting with it (i.e.

Unplugging it and then plugging it back in). I’ve sent feedback to Apple (not sure it will do any good). Be it this day or that day, something not at all cool happened with the arrival of the Apple-without-Steve-Jobs era You guys are talking about abandoning “pro” but to me it would be more accurate to say Apple’s new thing is targeting the 6-year-old set. I kicked down for a new MBP a few months ago and was high with the excitement of having another new electronic toy to play with–I couldn’t wait to power up and check it out. So I booted up and instead of being psyched and enrapt for hours (as is my usual “new toy” m.o.), I was dismayed at the sight of these awful little icons that looked like they were made by a 4-year-old (probably some v.p.’s kid is what came to mind). I was so seriously turned off that I couldn’t do anything until I figured out how to replace them.

Which was when I next discovered that Yosemite was now my operating system–it too seemed to me to be a step down, not up, and I couldn’t find any “improvement”. It seemed to make my computing life harder, in fact, not easier. When I next visited my good friend GarageBand (who I generally spend the majority of my time with–I’m talking like 6-9 hours/day), I thought it would be fun, but OMFG I thought the icons were weak, but I was horrified–seriously, HORRIFIED (I’m a very visual person) –to see the lame graphics and distasteful disfigurement done to my digital friend by some idiot moron. Don’t even get me started on the newly-implemented features that are even worse (e.g., fat/changing-size tracks SUCK as does the unchangeable default of the “Catch Playhead” button who would implement features to aggravate and frustrate?!? I’m one who enjoys change–changing it UP, that is, and improving, not retarding!) So, longing to have GB ’11 back and wondering if I could re-vamp my laptop to run Snow Leopard, if not for just the icons and the ease of use with the older version of GB, I visited the Apple store to ask the techs if this was possible and to also ask, “What exactly was [theoretically] improved with Yosemite?!” Nothing save for syncing capabilities between phone and laptop, etc., I was told. What-with the dawning of the age of “homeland ‘ha-ha’ security” etc., I don’t ever sync ANY of my equipment. My dismay continued to grow as I realized the direction Apple appeared to be going in was the opposite of what I had in mind.

Laugh if you like, but I was seriously considering changing my system so as to run Snow Leopard (I haven’t yet, but I’m still toying with the idea). All that being said, when El Capitan was available, I went for it figuring anything’s better than Yosemite. We’ll see, I’m exploring it now Steve Jobs, your energy and your being are seriously missed •. Be it this day or that day, something not at all cool happened with the arrival of the Apple-without-Steve-Jobs era You guys are talking about abandoning “pro” but to me it would be more accurate to say Apple’s new thing is targeting the 6-year-old set.

I kicked down for a new MBP a few months ago and was high with the excitement of having another new electronic toy to play with–I couldn’t wait to power up and check it out. So I booted up and instead of being psyched and enrapt for hours (as is my usual “new toy” m.o.), I was dismayed at the sight of these awful little icons that looked like they were made by a 4-year-old (probably some v.p.’s kid is what came to mind).

I was so seriously turned off that I couldn’t do anything until I figured out how to replace them. Which was when I next discovered that Yosemite was now my operating system–it too seemed to me to be a step down, not up, and I couldn’t find any “improvement”. It seemed to make my computing life harder, in fact, not easier. When I next visited my good friend GarageBand (who I generally spend the majority of my time with–I’m talking like 6-9 hours/day), I thought it would be fun, but OMFG I thought the icons were weak, but I was horrified–seriously, HORRIFIED (I’m a very visual person) –to see the lame graphics and distasteful disfigurement done to my digital friend by some idiot moron.

Don’t even get me started on the newly-implemented features that are even worse (e.g., fat/changing-size tracks SUCK as does the unchangeable default of the “Catch Playhead” button who would implement features to aggravate and frustrate?!? I’m one who enjoys change–changing it UP, that is, and improving, not retarding!) So, longing to have GB ’11 back and wondering if I could re-vamp my laptop to run Snow Leopard, if not for just the icons and the ease of use with the older version of GB, I visited the Apple store to ask the techs if this was possible and to also ask, “What exactly was [theoretically] improved with Yosemite?!” Nothing save for syncing capabilities between phone and laptop, etc., I was told. What-with the dawning of the age of “homeland ‘ha-ha’ security” etc., I don’t ever sync ANY of my equipment.

My dismay continued to grow as I realized the direction Apple appeared to be going in was the opposite of what I had in mind. Laugh if you like, but I was seriously considering changing my system so as to run Snow Leopard (I haven’t yet, but I’m still toying with the idea). All that being said, when El Capitan was available, I went for it figuring anything’s better than Yosemite.

We’ll see, I’m exploring it now Steve Jobs, your energy and your being are seriously missed •.