

This leaves us with a kind of "Computer-Geeky made" software that does not always fit in the "traditional" production environment that we're comfortably used to.

The program writers who designed this platform are obviously not seasoned Professional Content Producers (as seen in their own sales and weekly promotional pieces). VMix's User Interface feels a little clunky making the learning curve just a bit harder than it has to be. Their integration of dedicated Call-In features along with NDI & SRT support is notably featured and it all comes at an affordable price.Ĭons: It's hard to post cons as I really really had to think hard to come up with a couple aspects that I honestly think they might be taken as trite points. Everything it does, it does well, or at least pretty darned well. VMix has boldly added just about everything, but the kitchen sink, and they don't apologize for it. I see how all the "Old-School" companies are bad-mouthing vMix as being "just a toy" because they are genuinely scared of losing their clientele to vMix. VMix has excelled in newer, popular features and seems to be coming out with more features every six months or so. (although NewTek is mainly a hardware solution with software) That being said vMix is the premiere new kid on the block that have raised the bar significantly for everyone else, including NewTek. vMix is not made or affiliated in any way with NewTek. Pros: First off, there is an Error in this comparison description.
