![]() ![]() So for me, the amount I learned is more important than having the certification, but the certificate is a nice bonus. There are also a billion keyboard shortcuts which will make your life easier once you get the hang of them. I'm now far more structured with naming my busses, my i/o is a lot tidier, I understand a lot more about how to move track data between sessions quickly, stuff like that. Secondly, you wont find a DAW with the same feature set as Pro Tools HD for '10-20 times less' in price. The pricing, support plan, etc have been in place for a number of years now. It's not that I didn't know the concept existed, it's just that now I'm building up a way of setting up a session so that I can instantly navigate quickly. Pro Tools HD is now called Pro Tools Ultimate. " on the keypad, and that's my track selected ready for bouncing, sample-perfect length every time. Just things which are absolute basics to them like using memory locations for selections: I now set the start and end point of my track for bounce purposes, save it as memory location 1. Yes, 4000 is a lot to spend on an interface when there are other devices for less money that appear to have most of the features of Carbon. However because of that, the idea is that you can go to any studio with Pro Tools, tell them you have your PT Level 2, and you should be able to just sit down and do the entire session - headphone feeds, auxs, i/o setup, edits etc.īut the main thing is how much I've learned, and how much more slick my sessions now are. The certification itself is not easy, you really do need to know your stuff as there's just not enough time in the course to learn everything, so you'll only pass the exams if you have prior experience. For beatmaking-type studios not so much, but for live band stuff I'd be surprised to find a studio which doesn't have it. Pro Tools 9 (and 10) is excellent value, even the. However, if you want to work in any kind of large or professional studio any time soon, you'll need to at least know the basics and the more you know the better. There's a lot of indirect value to owning pro tools, from hundreds of people across the globe being able to relate when you (inevitably) start cursing its limitations or bugs, to actually being able to hand your work down the standard role chain of bigger post-production projects. ![]() I was in two minds doing it - on one hand Pro Tools is expensive and cumbersome and there are plenty of cheaper options out there which do the "same" job in theory. I've done my 101, 110 and 201, and I'm doing the 210 in April. Okay well I'm half way through mine so maybe I can offer some actual answers rather than conjecture. ![]()
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