My Experience with Mixvibe DVS

I want to talk a little bit about my experiences with using Mixvibes DVS for the past four years. A product that I bought, because I liked the idea of a software that would work with any sound card I wanted to use. I have used three different sound cards since I bought the software in 2007, and I have had some ups and downs. I don't want to complain too much about my experience, but there are some issues that I think need to be exposed.
First off, for a software that really needs a good community of support, the community has done nothing but give me headaches from the beginning. This is my biggest issue with Mixvibes DVS. I first bought the Maya 44 USB sound card, and it worked great, even though the latency was a little high, it was a solid card that worked great until the built-in USB cable frayed. One time, while DJing live in a club, Mixvibes had a glitch and would not work at all. I came to the community to figure out what to do, and the answer I got still pisses me off to this day. Instead of helping me, everyone told me that my sound card sucked and I needed to get a new one. It turned out not to be the sound card at all. There was an EXE file that I had to run that was in the Mixvibes directory that reset everything back to factory defaults, and after that I never had the issue again.
What really makes me mad is that everyone who told me that the Maya 44 USB was not good enough to use for live shows recommended that I get a "Better" sound card like the U46MKII. I ended up buying that card, and after about 6 months I had more problems with it than I ever had with the Maya 44 USB. It would crash constantly, and the right channel was always louder than the left channel, and there were no internal balance controls to work around it. I had to always use my mixer to compensate. I also tried doing a live set with it using Ableton, and whenever I would switch MIDI instruments it would crash Ableton.
Now I have a Hercules DJ Trim 4&6 and I'm very happy with it. The only thing that is lacks that I liked about the U46MKII was the Hi-Z input, but I can live without it. It's more stable, and stronger physically to handle playing in a club environment.
Now I go onto the Mixvibes website for the first time in a year or so, and I find out that the new version of Mixvibes DVS has support for VST plugins. Cool, right? But I have to buy the full package with the sound card to upgrade? That's BS. I just want the software. But whatever, I'll probably buy it anyway just because I support Mixvibes and everything they have done for nerdy digital DJs like myself.
BUT WAIT ONE SECOND. What do I see is the sound card that comes with Mixvibes DVS Ultimate? A re-branded Maya 44 USB. The same card that was supposedly not good enough for professional use, according to this community. Clearly the forums are not the place to go for answers.
I'm hoping that Mixvibes changes their mind and offers a software upgrade to reward me for my many years of use and evangelism of the product, at a reasonable price.
Regardless, big thanks to Mixvibes for providing me more hardware choices with my DVS software. I have played everywhere from Detroit to Miami to LA using Mixvibes DVS and I can't begin to describe how much this has improved and complimented my DJing skills and abilities.
First off, for a software that really needs a good community of support, the community has done nothing but give me headaches from the beginning. This is my biggest issue with Mixvibes DVS. I first bought the Maya 44 USB sound card, and it worked great, even though the latency was a little high, it was a solid card that worked great until the built-in USB cable frayed. One time, while DJing live in a club, Mixvibes had a glitch and would not work at all. I came to the community to figure out what to do, and the answer I got still pisses me off to this day. Instead of helping me, everyone told me that my sound card sucked and I needed to get a new one. It turned out not to be the sound card at all. There was an EXE file that I had to run that was in the Mixvibes directory that reset everything back to factory defaults, and after that I never had the issue again.
What really makes me mad is that everyone who told me that the Maya 44 USB was not good enough to use for live shows recommended that I get a "Better" sound card like the U46MKII. I ended up buying that card, and after about 6 months I had more problems with it than I ever had with the Maya 44 USB. It would crash constantly, and the right channel was always louder than the left channel, and there were no internal balance controls to work around it. I had to always use my mixer to compensate. I also tried doing a live set with it using Ableton, and whenever I would switch MIDI instruments it would crash Ableton.
Now I have a Hercules DJ Trim 4&6 and I'm very happy with it. The only thing that is lacks that I liked about the U46MKII was the Hi-Z input, but I can live without it. It's more stable, and stronger physically to handle playing in a club environment.
Now I go onto the Mixvibes website for the first time in a year or so, and I find out that the new version of Mixvibes DVS has support for VST plugins. Cool, right? But I have to buy the full package with the sound card to upgrade? That's BS. I just want the software. But whatever, I'll probably buy it anyway just because I support Mixvibes and everything they have done for nerdy digital DJs like myself.
BUT WAIT ONE SECOND. What do I see is the sound card that comes with Mixvibes DVS Ultimate? A re-branded Maya 44 USB. The same card that was supposedly not good enough for professional use, according to this community. Clearly the forums are not the place to go for answers.
I'm hoping that Mixvibes changes their mind and offers a software upgrade to reward me for my many years of use and evangelism of the product, at a reasonable price.
Regardless, big thanks to Mixvibes for providing me more hardware choices with my DVS software. I have played everywhere from Detroit to Miami to LA using Mixvibes DVS and I can't begin to describe how much this has improved and complimented my DJing skills and abilities.