Daw Wars. Like Tyan said, it's the interface/workflow we are talking about here. One difference is Logic has implemented side chaining better than Cubase/Nuendo v3 not sure about 4, and Cubase and Nuendo have easy warping of audio like Abelton.
What it really comes down to is the the plug in instruments and effects. Logic does have a better bundled suite, but most people will use some 3rd party stuff anyway, and the big ones are all cross platform.
After Apple bought out emagic and Logic was no longer available for PC I switched to Nuendo. I have only recently moved to a 3.0GHz quad for Logic. I personally find it quicker to get a song written in Logic with all the libraries for ideas. It's a bit like Reason in that respect. I then bounce down the tracks in Logic and master in Nuendo. This stops me trying to tweak/master all the sounds while still at the writing stage, and also because my PC still has the Sony Oxford and SSL plugs which I use to master.
Daw Wars. Like Tyan said, it's the interface/workflow we are talking about here. One difference is Logic has implemented side chaining better than Cubase/Nuendo v3 not sure about 4, and Cubase and Nuendo have easy warping of audio like Abelton.
What it really comes down to is the the plug in instruments and effects. Logic does have a better bundled suite, but most people will use some 3rd party stuff anyway, and the big ones are all cross platform.
After Apple bought out emagic and Logic was no longer available for PC I switched to Nuendo. I have only recently moved to a 3.0GHz quad for Logic. I personally find it quicker to get a song written in Logic with all the libraries for ideas. It's a bit like Reason in that respect. I then bounce down the tracks in Logic and master in Nuendo. This stops me trying to tweak/master all the sounds while still at the writing stage, and also because my PC still has the Sony Oxford and SSL plugs which I use to master.