macProVideo.com Launches Educational DSP Plugin for Logic Pro X
Why go outside from being in the box?
Audio education specialists macProVideo.com have realized there’s no need to leave the DAW environment to learn about its workings. Hence, the release of a new educational DSP plugin designed to help audio producers learn software and music production skills, directly inside of Logic Pro X.
Called the macProVideo Player, the new offering is a free 64-bit AudioUnits plugin designed specifically for Logic Pro X and other 64-bit Audio DAWs.
Here are more details, direct from macProVideo.com:
This new plugin can be inserted into any channel strip in Logic Pro X. Once enabled, the plugin provides direct access to a full curriculum of courseware created exclusively by macProVideo to help users learn fundamental skills in audio production, including recording, mixing, mastering, and using the instruments and DSP effects in Logic Pro.
The macProVideo Player plugin for Logic Pro X provides access to the company’s extensive library of audio software and workflow skills courses. Users can follow along as professional instructors demonstrate how to use Logic Pro in production studio environments. Because the plugin inserts into any track in Logic Pro X, there’s no need to open a web browser to launch the company’s website before finding tutorials of interest. The result is quicker learning, directly inside the Logic Pro X software itself.
In addition to their ever-expanding library of Logic Pro X courses, the new plugin also provides fast access to macProVideo’s full online courseware library, including over 25,000 tutorials for Native Instruments, Moog, Maschine, Akai, iZotope, Autotune, Waves, Rob Papen, and dozens of other audio synth, plugin, and software applications.
The new plugin is available for free directly from the company’s website. Over 2,000 tutorials are available upon installing, or users can upgrade to an all-access Library Pass and more than 1,500 hours of exclusive courseware for just $25 per month.
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JimGramze
August 22, 2013 at 4:49 am (11 years ago)There is an essential reason for having this plugin that I have not seen mentioned anywhere. The tutorials when viewed in a conventional browser make things difficult because the focus of the computer is switched to the browser while controlling the tutorial and every time you wish to try what you are being shown you must first click on a logic window to change focus and then have access to logic’s menus and controls. Having the tutorials inside Logic keeps the computer’s focus on Logic and saves this constant switching; otherwise if you pause the video in your browser and go directly to the File menu it is the browser’s file menu and not Logic’s file menu which is maddening.