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by input_sh 514 days ago
To be fair, every commercial competitor (like Rekordbox and Traktor) also supports mapping MIDI devices that are not officially supported.

But in my experience, you'll never be able to control the jogwheel as precisely as in officially-supported hardware-software combo.

2 comments

In Rekordbox's case Pioneer have restricted the jogwheel mapping to Pioneer hardware only. So, you pretty much need Pioneer hardware to use Rekordbox. And seeing as Pioneer decks are almost industry standard in clubs and you need Rekordbox to organise your playlists, they have the DJ hardware market sewn up. Which is very frustrating because Rekordbox has to be the most resource intensive (& therefore inefficient) DJ software available.
It’s amazing just how badly Technics dropped the ball.

At one point they were the industry standard but they shot themselves in the foot with their reluctance to release a CD turntable until after Pioneer had already got themselves into nearly every club.

Though I can’t say I’m surprised. I never thought 1210s was a particularly good vinyl turntable either.

Resource intensive, and it's been crashing on me far too regularly to be relied on at all.
A good retrospect on how Pioneer got here [0] and a 'feature' overview of CDJs pre/post buyout[1].

[0]: https://youtu.be/LcbKcmfFCc4

[1]: https://youtu.be/-4DZ47HCYWA

So many issues with Rekordbox and their vendor lock-in. I can't even reliably export songs on a flash drive and have it showing up in their CDJ. It's honestly time to take the Pioneer giant down.
I always thought the reason Rekordbox became the standard was to get around the 4GB limitation of FAT32-formatted USBs.
Is it latency? Or granularity? MIDI has upper limits on both…or is it a more subtle quality like ballistics?