Cm9,
The issue of constant upgrades is certainly a valid one, but I guess we're being conditioned to accept that. One of the things that Fractal is doing "right", from all accounts, is responding to user feedback & making changes & updates to their software on a regular basis. I don't think they are charging for this. Of course, eventually they will need to upgrade the hardware to go to the next level.
I'm not sure it's that much different than needing more power or more features from a classic amp. You don't upgrade, you buy another one. And then another. We all make decisions on whether we can live with what we have or whether we need more gear. Isn't GAS the big problem with guitar guys?
All the new modelling amps in the world won't affect your ability to keep building & using the old gear that you love.
I do think that the black magic & mojo mythology that has infiltrated the vintage analog gear world (like it did to the audiophile world before it) has created a tremendous amount of misinformation & outright cons. There's no magic to the physics of the world we live in. Tubes/transformers/speakers may create complex waveforms in response to an input signal, but it's still a finite number of possibilities. I believe that the modelling engineers will be able to get close enough to satisfy 90% of the market.
The issue of constant upgrades is certainly a valid one, but I guess we're being conditioned to accept that. One of the things that Fractal is doing "right", from all accounts, is responding to user feedback & making changes & updates to their software on a regular basis. I don't think they are charging for this. Of course, eventually they will need to upgrade the hardware to go to the next level.
I'm not sure it's that much different than needing more power or more features from a classic amp. You don't upgrade, you buy another one. And then another. We all make decisions on whether we can live with what we have or whether we need more gear. Isn't GAS the big problem with guitar guys?
All the new modelling amps in the world won't affect your ability to keep building & using the old gear that you love.
I do think that the black magic & mojo mythology that has infiltrated the vintage analog gear world (like it did to the audiophile world before it) has created a tremendous amount of misinformation & outright cons. There's no magic to the physics of the world we live in. Tubes/transformers/speakers may create complex waveforms in response to an input signal, but it's still a finite number of possibilities. I believe that the modelling engineers will be able to get close enough to satisfy 90% of the market.
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