Stormcaller wrote:Hardware wise it's pretty much just a different volume control and a killswitch per stem.
From the reviews and talking to some very experienced DJs that have played around with it (like serious playing around), having a screen per deck is, if not necessary, highly desirable to get the most out of stems. Yes, you can always use some other controller that you can then map, but personally I think only a relatively small portion of users is that advanced. Many will just want plug and play and focus on using what's there, not spending time making something work that wasn't really designed for it.
Stormcaller wrote:Also, They are going to want to watch their estranged divorcee Pioneer ... because they just decided to turn Rekordbox from a track preparation tool into a fully fledged rival DJ software ...
And it looks like a marriage of RekordBox track management with ... tata ... Serato. So that race is run.
I think that Cross is in danger of losing customers by not adopting a "our software will work with all the major brand controllers" approach. Having good contacts with manufacturers that get you early (pre)production models to test and make a mapping for would be clearly essential, but it can be done (Serato made it happen, even when Traktor seemed to goto software for all brands). Something else is marketing and sales presence. Every review is about the big three. You never see Cross on any of the tradeshows, will you guys be at the BPM in Birmingham in a few weeks?
No big name DJs endorsing Cross. No major brands delivering a Light/LE/Intro version of Cross with their controllers.
In short, if you don't know it already or someone points it out to you, you have no idea it even exists.
Which is a pity, because I think it is very close to Serato in many aspects and I feel no desire to change from Cross to Serato at this time, even with a Serato-supported DDJ-SX as my primary controller now.
I so wish for Cross to become a bit more mainstream. Which would in turn increase revenue which would lead to more money for development which would lead to faster innovation curves which ... well you get the idea.