Hey David,
Thanks for your email. Smile. I'm glad to have your suggestions.
First, happily, I'm fairly familiar with the Mac. I've been using a Mac since 2013. during the first few months, an Apple accessibility tech was amazed by how fast I was on my Mac and asked if I would share how I'm doing things so quickly. Mind you, I've been using personal computers since around 1979, back when I had an Apple 2e for a year or two and then switched to MSDOS.
Anyway, what I am not very familiar with is YouTube Premium and Substack. Steve gave me some useful information how to operate them, but, unfortunately, some of the information proved to be false. For example, when I first asked him how to get to the chronological beginning of his videos, he said just keep arrowing down. Unfortunately, that only got me back to January, and I have yet to figure out how to go farther back in time.
Steve did try. He later suggested other methods how to go back in time, but they didn't work.
I'll probably try again. I do that, you know, keep trying that is. I figure I must be missing something obvious, so I keep looking, keep beating my head against the wall, even though if usually only adds to how much time I am wasting.
Meanwhile, if you have a tip or trick how I can get to the beginning of the videos and how to move forward and back through them all from newest to oldest and back again, I'd love to hear it. The Monster may have around 144 videos, but I sure can't find most of them.
Hey, thank you so much for the links! big happy smile. I will most definitely see where they lead. Also, I really appreciate your hint I forget about the videos for now and just go straight into the documentation. I had thought that doing the videos first would orient and focus me for diving into the user manual and enable me to get my cheat sheet in shape first, but since I'm going nowhere fast with the video library, I will give the documentation a shot. At this point I really don't have anything to lose, other than time.
Thumb's up! I will report back to you on how it's going.
I'll also try your playlist link, and if it takes me where ican wade through some more videos, I will give them a listen, perhaps first before I try the documentation.
Back when I first bought an interface, I tried the Apple Logic Pro documentation and almost immediately became lost and bewildered, which is when I turned to Steve fore tutoring. smile. I still have my original notes. The helped!
From the new videos I have managed to hear, I've made new notes. I'd like to keep that process going because they were very useful back in 2016, 2017 etc. Quick reference really works for me.
Although not quick reference, User manuals are great, too, if they are both concise and comprehensive in an understandable, straightforward way. Often, user manuals make the mistake of assuming the reader already knows things that I don't know. This causes me a lot of confusion, as you might imagine, which is why I started with Steve's videos to get his overview.
I will also give shift[-h a try. I've wondered if that list of videos is something I can scroll through, but it doesn't seem to be. I had thought shift-h takes you heading by heading up the page, but perhaps shift-h will get me farther back in time.
David, don't worry about being rude; you haven't been. You've been sincere and helpful. I value that.
I'm sorry if I've confused you. My story is too long and involved and of little value here. I've offered examples along the way so you and others might understand I'm not complaining without cause. I don't like wasting my time, which is why I hired Steve to begin with, and he has saved me time off and on for years, which is why I'm still paying him. Lately, though, I can't help but get the feeling he isn't paying attention to what he says to me, unintentionally, of course, but these lapses in attention have caused me to waste many hours of my time, resulting in me getting very frustrated. So I try to get him to focus.
I don't blame him for being inattentive. Everyone gets that way from time to time. I just want him to resume is attention where I'm concerned. I don't want his time wasted either, and he does spend considerable time on me, just not always focused time.
I don't blame myself, either. I don't claim to be a genius. I do listen and pay attention to the literal meaning of words. Comes from having spent decades as a trial lawyer. But I know I can be downright dumb. MY wife tells me so; and, I believe her, which is why I've learned to cut myself some slack. I'm perfectly willing to cut Steve slack, too.
As for why you didn't have any trouble accessing the Getting Started with Logic courses, it's probably because you did so when you subscribed. Steve originally told me to use the subscribe link, too, not remembering I had subscribed some time previously.
Guess what? I tried and tried and tried to find that Getting Started course by using that subscribe link he kept pointing me to. What happened? I wasted an enormous amount of time without getting anywhere. I kep telling him it's not working; he kept telling me, in effect, to keep trying.
Some days ago, Steve finally paid attention to me long enough to say something like, "oh, you are already subscribed; that means you have to get the Getting Started course a different way."
Anyway, where I'm trying to get to is to develop my cheat sheet quick reference notes for the features that are new to Logic Pro since Logic Pro 10, and I'm trying to do the same for Logic Magician, which is a brilliant innovation from all I can tell, speeding up workflow enormously. Once I have my Logic Pro 12 qnde LM quic reference cheat sheet I intend to dive into a few projects I've been eader to start. After that, I intend to avail myself of Steve's personal tutorial assistance (I'm pre-paid for another 12 hours of tutoring) for his help how to fix whatever problems I'm encountering and how to improve whatever it is I'm doing.
Three dimensional automation may be very challenging for the Monster and me since neither of us have used ATMOS mixing, and I have a few very specific effects I hope to achieve with automation, specifically geting a bunch of tracks with moving sounds that dive and rise, slow and speed up, get louder and softer, and even swirl around, all to give the listener the feeling of a breeze flowing by and fading into the distance.
Thank you again, David. Smile. Creating and producing music is probably the last item on my bucket list. Your help saving me time is worth more than you know.
Joy!
Bruce