Fender releases a DAW, all platforms, free.

Thinking on this a bit more.

Rock music isn't "dead" in 2025 but it's way different than it was 20+ years ago. It's a lot less guitar hero and a lot more indie rock. Lots of jangly guitars that are more textured than riffing. Way more women in bands than there used to be. And Fender guitars are overwhelmingly the instruments of choice.

I read an article about a bunch of teenagers starting bands in Chicago a few years ago, and there was a chunk of the article where younger teens were highly impressed by older teens that had real Fender instruments which made them professional in their eyes. They saw Fenders as the gold standard, so that brand building really does make an impact.

Teenagers don't use computers. They didn't grow up with them and don't have much use for them outside school. They do live on their phones and tablets though. Offering a free DAW that integrates to some lower price hardware from a highly trusted brand would be huge for kids. I could see that ultimately leading to a subscription platform that offers things like loops and libraries and what not.

If you're 15 years old, you're not going to save up $1-2k to get a computer, audio interface, hardware modeler, and DAW. You probably already have a phone and headphones, so a free DAW plus a < $100 guitar input to your phone is way more achievable. And you don't care how accurate the modeling is because you've never even seen a tube amp in real life.

TL/DR - Fender's free DAW isn't aimed at anyone who posts on a gear forum or has a computer set up for recording already. It's for kids who are just getting into music and maybe just got their first guitar.
Makes sense to me.

Plus, live stages are less relevant, and socials are all the more relevant, making recording more important. If I’m correct studio one invests a lot in video integration, would make sense to me if we are gonna see that also.
 
Season 9 Yes GIF by Friends

Precisely. Opens 1:1 with all plugins and their settings intact. You can as well export a Logic project to Garageband, but I think you'll end up with audiofiles, so it's pretty much a one way street.
Good to know...thanks!
 
An iPad and a decent interface is infinitely more powerful than what I spent over a grand on 20 or so years ago. So yeah I think it’s a big factor.
Well... a decent interface and a decent iPad can comfortably be over a grand. I always get a little surprised when people talk about iPad based solutions as affordable ones. They are not. And that´s not even entering in iPad accesories territory.
 
An iPad and a decent interface is infinitely more powerful than what I spent over a grand on 20 or so years ago. So yeah I think it’s a big factor.
Companies see consumer hardware (the little computers people carry around all day) as an opportunity, as well they should. I'm not the target market for this, but if I got paid a nickel every time I noticed that, I'd be retired by now.
 
Well... a decent interface and a decent iPad can comfortably be over a grand. I always get a little surprised when people talk about iPad based solutions as affordable ones. They are not. And that´s not even entering in iPad accesories territory.
And I always get surprised when people say that they can’t be affordable. iPad: $350. UA Volt interface: $199. For $550, it’s way better than the Roland VS I had.
 
And I always get surprised when people say that they can’t be affordable. iPad: $350. UA Volt interface: $199. For $550, it’s way better than the Roland VS I had.

But that 350 iPad will not even get you into the ballpark of what an equally cheap Windows box will allow you to do. Let alone all the affordable or free plugins you will never be able to run. Let alone whatever sample libraries you may not be able to use at all, not only because most of them don't exist in iOS format but also because you'll be running out of storage space instantly - which will most likely become a general issue, too.

Sure, if all you want is to noodle around a bit with Garageband or Cubasis, you might be fine. But anything beyond that will quickly let you run into severe limitations.
 
But that 350 iPad will not even get you into the ballpark of what an equally cheap Windows box will allow you to do. Let alone all the affordable or free plugins you will never be able to run. Let alone whatever sample libraries you may not be able to use at all, not only because most of them don't exist in iOS format but also because you'll be running out of storage space instantly - which will most likely become a general issue, too.

Sure, if all you want is to noodle around a bit with Garageband or Cubasis, you might be fine. But anything beyond that will quickly let you run into severe limitations.
Who was comparing it to Windows? I wasn’t.

Additionally, a $350 Windows machine will be an absolute pile of shit.
 
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Who was comparing it to Windows? I wasn’t.

Additionally, a $350 Windows machine will be an absolute pile of shit.
My main Windows machine costed $400 and it´s perfectly capable of running all NAM instances, plugins and whatnot. Not sure about a $400 iPad could do... but man...

Anyway, if this is a computer-vs-iPad discussion, mate, I can suspect you´re going to have a hard time.
 
My main Windows machine costed $400 and it´s perfectly capable of running all NAM instances, plugins and whatnot. Not sure about a $400 iPad could do... but man...

Anyway, if this is a computer-vs-iPad discussion, mate, I can suspect you´re going to have a hard time.
Not as hard of a time as it is for you guys, not realizing I’m not talking about computers.
 
We're comparing DAW options to DAW options.



No.

And fwiw, I'm a Mac user.
Jesus fucking Christ dude. I was comparing it to the old Roland VS I had. You’re the one that brought up computers. As someone else said you just like to fucking argue and it gets tiresome.

And yes, a $350 laptop is gonna be a piece of shit.
 
Jesus fucking Christ dude. I was comparing it to the old Roland VS I had. You’re the one that brought up computers. As someone else said you just like to fucking argue and it gets tiresome.

And yes, a $350 laptop is gonna be a piece of shit.
I´m mixing on the go with a $350 laptop... and it´s perfectly fine for the task. Plugins, effects, lots of tracks in reaper...

But hey, nevermind.
 
Show us the specs and some projects you can sucessfully run.
i’m done arguing with you. If you can’t see the appeal of a DAW on an iPad, for people that just wanna get their ideas down easily without messing with the windows machine, you are naïve.

And again, because you like being purposely obtuse, I was comparing an iPad+interface to my old Roland VS, as to how much more powerful and easy it is.
 
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