Just another geeks viewpoint here...
Old School wrote:... This is the environment of a commercial studio, and no one is making any console (for less than 50 grand) that I know of which can handle all these things like the D8B does.
Concise, and right to the point... and accurate AF. The product designers & engineers behind the D8B n HDR were certainly on the money when they sat down to plan this endeavor. They magically hit all the marks for marketing, leveraging current (at that time) technology and forward-thinking designs for engineering... a win-win from Mackie's viewpoint. And lo and behold, it even turns out in being extensible beyond original design factors in the sense that here we all are on this forum discussing the possibility of implementing the integration of different tech to extend the lifespan of this gear - I don't think that was factored into any business plan by any means *grins*. From my own technical & manufacturing background, that's something you don't often see.
Personally, I don't feel this gear is just another piece of throw-away type tech that's just tossed onto the scrap heap and forgotten, allegedly having outlived it's usefulness. For me, it's turned out to be an incredibly flexible bridge from the old skool 'poly n rust' to the modern digital worlds of recording (OTB/ITB). Anyone's own actual mileage may vary regarding this individual bias - and probably does. I also acknowledge and respect those opinions as well...
Old School wrote:I don't agree that the market is too small, by nature almost everyone who records music is a perfectionist and with the equipment sales to home studios now in the billions, I think a significant percentage would buy a revamped D8B offering. Not that much would even have to change. Just a modern MB, better pre amps, better converters and the ability to run 3rd party plug-ins, a usb interface and the D8B would be hard to beat.
BOOM
And there it is. When I first read this, I had to go back and read it again because it struck me as something profoundly accurate. Ideally, the internal pc boards involved with the pre's and converters could theoretically have been re-engineered using better (Onyx pre?!?) hardware tech, better compression, and any I/O including the USB stack likely would have been considered here - the system is pretty modular in regards to it's engineering design, build out and theoretical support in this sense. Plugins are (obviously) an operating system function, but just in terms of following along the theoretic nature of this topic it could logically be assumed that the operating system would have been addressed here as well. The interface having already been established, it certainly could have been altered based on the requirements of any design changes implemented. Yup, damn difficult to top this list of available functionality... particularly at the price point(s) involved...
Old School wrote:I don't think production cost is the problem either as most of the audio companies now have their hardware produced in China at unbelievably low costs ( it cost the Chinese less than $200 US to build a 32 channel digital mixer).
More BOOM
I believe Mike is correct here... any manufacturer, anywhere, is gonna build a product EXACTLY as it's spec-d out to be, and it's going to be built against the BOM provided by the engineering/sales company (Mackie, Behringer, SoundCraft, etal) as inexpensively as possible. That's just how business is done, everywhere - management has a fiduciary responsibility to the stock holders of the company. There's usually provisions and/or riders in any contracts for support where cross-referenced substitution of particular parts are NOT licensed (approved), critical to operation. So ultimately the consumer purchases, again, EXACTLY what the engineering/sales company has ordered and paid for to be built - doesn't matter who builds it. The manufacturer with the best bid wins. The final consumer sales and profit numbers have already been crunched by marketing at this point for the bean-counters...
captainamerica wrote:IMHO, tech always fails when innovation is ahead or not aligned (timing?) with the supply and demand rules of corporate gains - balanced against cheap commodity electronics.
Ka-BOOM
The Trifecta... make no mistake, the world is ruled by trade & commerce... end of story...
As if you didn't know this was coming, however here it is anyway:
[Standard Mgmt Disclaimer] - "Your actual mileage may vary..."