I'm surprised this hasn't been addressed yet, given:
1) How many professionals use Logic
2) How common it is for said professionals to pass tracks back and forth over email, im, Dropbox and other filesharing services
Maybe advertising such as service gives artists an unwarranted assumption of privacy and security vs. using something like email where there is less expectation and more assumed risk.
Uploading/Downloading project files of a few GB, where a 300-400 MB can be added in just one additional session, doesn't work very well with iCloud and current BS connections.
So for a lot of people the experience would be subpar (with their 2-20MBps assymetric DSL etc). Not, Apple could only enabled for speedy connections (symmetric, fiber etc), but then tons of users would cry for being excluded.
That's not how Apple usually rolls.
I'd say than when the speeds are mature enough, in 4-5 years, there would be a version of Logic with iCloud support.
For now, they can leave it to third party providers, like Dropbox, so they get all the blame (and/or praise, for those that are content with that).
Also surprised, perhaps they are issues with the content rights sharing audio/video on their servers? Thats the only thing I can think of. Getting into this market it would be a huge and important move for them to make.
As far as I can tell iCloud still has no sharing feature. I was really bummed as I'd love to be able to use that instead of Dropbox for managing Pages documents (mostly book manuscripts), but it just doesn't seem to be there yet.
1) How many professionals use Logic 2) How common it is for said professionals to pass tracks back and forth over email, im, Dropbox and other filesharing services
Maybe advertising such as service gives artists an unwarranted assumption of privacy and security vs. using something like email where there is less expectation and more assumed risk.