Įxcept that cd’s and vinyl are still being made. If you really want to learn - go read about it, watch some videos, join r/wavelab. You don't sound like a serious mastering engineer - so it's not surprising that you don't understand the differences. Stop shitting on professional tools just because you don't want to invest in them. You want to master your project in a DAW - go ahead. People who use it aren't wasting their money. Wavelab has been around for a LONG time my friend. I'm just here to push back on anyone saying it's a waste of money. make it a great choice for mastering audio - if you can read, you can learn this yourself. And I'm not going to try to convince you by quoting the features and tools that Wavelab has which. Again - before you jump to conclusions - it's ok for you to "master" your music in Cubase if you want - go ahead. I also said that of course it's possible to master in a DAW - but professionals use tools designed for the task because it saves time and the features built in to a tool designed for mastering make doing the job easier, faster, better. I said people who master professionally know very well the difference between using an editor like Wavelab and working in a DAW. Second - I never said Wavelab gives you better mastering. it's not clear to me that you understand the difference. First - mixing is a separate process from mastering. Not sure if you're being a smartass or not, so I'll give you the benefit of the doubt and assume you're asking a genuine question.
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