The original thought was to keep everything all of the time, which created a lot of unused orphaned busses. One of the key things that sparked these changes was the overwhelming large bus buildup that would happen when interchanging sessions between different systems. The product design team plans to share more posts like this on feature enhancements and workflows over time. What I’d like to do here in this blog post, is walk you through the thinking behind these changes, and explain the new behaviors of I/O Setup in Pro Tools 12. We’ve received a lot of feedback over the last few years, and it has encouraged us to make some improvements in this area. It has always been a very deep and complicated section of Pro Tools, for both us as developers and for our customers. The I/O Setup is extremely important in how users interface their Pro Tools software based sessions, with their ‘out of the box’ gear. I come from a music audio engineering background, but have also been deeply involved in many of the Pro Tools post production workflows for the last seven years. My name is Chris Winsor, and I’m one of the product designers on the Pro Tools team here at Avid.
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