chelsea4023 wrote:Hi,
As a Nautilus 88 owner who normally purchases the Korg arrangers, it has been a pretty steep learning curve. It amazes me when people say how easy it is to navigate. Thank you Youtube for all the tutorials.
Is it a given (as with many of Korgs flagship keyboards) that the Nautilus will get a Major upgrade ? Having never played or owned a Kronos I'm pretty much 'blown away' by what's onboard.
Chris
It's a significant investment of one's time to completely understand of all the features and how-to's to become proficient in the use of the Kronos / Nautilus / Krome / Kross / Triton workstations.
And while the manuals do have the detailed information you need, they don't always provide the 10,000 ft view of the specific use cases for what you're trying to do (hence YouTube and topics in this forum to supplement). But there is reward for that investment as there is likely a pathway to do just about anything you want musically.
I can't think of any Korg workstation that underwent a major software upgrade to provide new features and functionality after initial release (OASYS adding sound engines perhaps the exception). Most Korg workstation software releases are bug fixes with the occasional minor tweak to some functions.
Using past Korg workstation development timelines as a reference for how Nautilus may evolve, hardware updates in the form of more memory, disk space, CPU speed, and additional/updated preload sounds are possibilities in product updates (Nautilus 2, +, X, EX, Red, Titanium, Crystal, or other marketing moniker), which may or may not be supported by or upgradable in the current Nautilus.
But you know, there's something to be said for a stable product that doesn't have frequent updates - you get to know the features, functions, quirks, and bugs and the workarounds - without the risk of a software update introducing new bugs or requiring you to learn different steps to do what you already knew how to do.