Really? The same Larry Jordan who said FCPX was going to be the best? His faith in Apple's blandly positive PR statements is laughable.
While he definitely keeps a positive tone to his commentary ( he wouldn't get pre-release looks at FCP if he was constantly critical. ) not sure where the "great" comes from
October 2010 ( probably before he saw it )
"...Im not saying that Final Cut cant be improved. It certainly can and I hope it is. But I am saying there are a lot of steps between top-of-mind and dead. ..."
http://www.larryjordan.biz/app_bin/wordpress/archives/1284
Also in October 2010
" ... Philip Hodgetts has written a detailed, and I think, essentially accurate account of whats going on behind the scenes with Final Cut Studio.
Neither he, nor I, are privy to any Apple secrets. Philip is just very, very good at reading tea leaves.
You can read it here. [ actually here:
http://www.philiphodgetts.com/2010/09/what-should-apple-do-with-final-cut-pro/ ] ..."
http://www.larryjordan.biz/app_bin/wordpress/archives/1270
After the NAB demo
"... How could anything that radically different equal what we already had in Final Cut Pro 7?
I knew this new version was far more than iMovie but, at that time, I didnt think it was Final Cut Pro, either.
Its no secret that Apple gave me rare access to the software by inviting me to a demo of an early build of the software in February this year. However, what is not known, is that they also gave me permission to contact their development team to discuss the new version.
After NAB, and after my presentation at that April LAFCPUG meeting, I finally had time to follow-up on Apples offer. And I did. A lot.
I peppered them with questions:
..."
http://www.larryjordan.biz/app_bin/wordpress/archives/1498
If there is something to fail Larry Jordan with is why didn't he start peppering them with questions sooner. He waited many months. I think Apple picked a number of people to talk to that didn't do much talking back ( probably in part due fear of loosing access for future previews and also in part they know isn't really a open discussion of general direction. ) . Apple should have gotten alot more "don't you think the release process is going to blow up in your face" commentary before the release. There were lots of assumptions that dotting the i's and crossing the t's was going to be done and it wasn't. And frankly never going to expose that if don't ask questions.
Or after the announcement and release he had lots of positive things to say, but no he didn't join in the silliness of the "Apple hates Pros" bandwagon.
" ... THINGS I DONT LIKE
Final Cut Pro X is very impressive, but it isnt perfect. There are a variety of design decisions that I disagree with and Ive shared these many times with Apple.
Theres no multicam support.
The audio capabilities in FCP X are far superior to FCP 7 in terms of technical specs and filters. But a completely unintuitive method for adding audio cross-dissolves and lack of support for track-based audio mixing leaves me fondly missing the power of Soundtrack Pro.
The process of adding an audio cross-fade is dangerous, unintuitive and dumb.
Worse, theres no native way to export a project to send it to either Soundtrack Pro or ProTools for sound mixing.
Ive already mentioned there is no native ability to layback to tape using timecode control. ..."
http://www.larryjordan.biz/app_bin/wordpress/archives/1505
So this "it is going to be great" (implicitly in one giant leap) thing .... when did that happen? Different? yes. An evolutionary major shift? Yes.
If I didn't need a new Mac Pro myself, I would almost enjoy it if Larry Jordan were completely wrong about this one, just for the comedy value.
He is wrong in promoting the notion that somehow Apple "has to" do a Mac Pro because of some myriad of indirect entanglements with the rest of the product line up. They don't. If there is no market to support the Mac Pro by itself it will likely stop.
It appears that Apple is going to take another shot at finding out if there is one or not. But they aren't going to do it "just because". The rest of the Mac line up gets more capable every year. Over time that shows no signs of stopping. The upper end of that line up has always been eating away at the lower end of the Mac Pro line up. Apple will loose some if don't have a Mac Pro but won't loose all.