In the U.S., such associations include: Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools, North Central Association of Colleges and Schools, Western Association of Schools and Colleges, Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, New England Association of Schools and Colleges, Northwest Association of Accredited Schools. Department of Education/State Board of Education or the Canadian/Provincial Ministries of Education and that teach students as their primary focus. *Accredited schools are those that are approved by an association recognized by the U.S. Dated proof of purchase of curriculum for the current academic school year.Current membership ID to a homeschool association (for example, the Home School Legal Defense Association).Dated copy of a letter of intent to homeschool.Proof of eligibility must be a document issued by the institution with your name, institution name, and current date. Students and educators at accredited schools If you do not have a school-issued email address or your email address cannot be verified, additional proof of eligibility may be requested after purchase. k12, or other email domains sponsored by educational institutions. so it's whatever floats your bloat.Adobe verifies student status through the school-issued email address provide during purchase. Of course, others will swear by Slate, and "collect the whole set". And I'm not a "hype" person so I'm a little turned off by their incessant promotion howitzer. and I consider their track record more promise than deliver. I never bought the rack, the trigger thing, the SSD, nor that magical "put this on every channel and it will mix it for you!" thing. And I have found other tools that suit me better. I think it's use interface is too cluttered for me, which another user might appreciate, but I just never got into the flow of it. Let me wrap this up! I hardly ever use the VBC although it can provide satisfactory results. Meanwhile, I receive 10,000 more emails for every new product they are shouting about, and there are plenty. Still, they promise a mono compatibility update, which nearly everyone is demanding for some reason. I know, it's a "Bus" compressor so silly me for thinking I could use it everywhere.
#Slate vcc alternative full#
If we are being fair, that's like overlooking someone trying to hand you a dixie cup full of water while they are simultaneously bathing you in a firehose of hype. They must have overlooked that trivial little detail, and I must have overlooked the fine print, if there was any. So I bought Virtual Bus Compressor years ago, only to find it couldn't be used on mono tracks. I will say, the Slate Hype Machine at full operation is an impressive thing to watch. These get me to watch a dozen videos of Slate touting the latest and greatest. Then I recieve 10,000 emails about other products. I remember buying their entry-level drum sampler (Platinum EX? I think it was called). $200 a year for all the Slate FX seems reasonable - and is still cheaper than buying the Waves SSL. Or, I could just throw my hands in the air and accept that if I want to cover all the bases from Slate, I'll need to go for the Everything Bundle. But to a prospective buyer like me, it's all rather confusing, and makes me appreciate Waves' approach to the SSL 4000 that much more. Once you get past the marketing, isn't that how they actually function? Or am I missing some obvious reason why they have to be promoted separately? I suspect they're marketed this way to make sure we get how "special" each package is - how much work went into the R&D of each one. What I don't understand is why Slate didn't just call it VMR (Virtual Mix Rack) and offer all the rest as rack modules. First, let me start by saying that I'm actually pretty impressed by the Slate Digital line and have heard great things about the analogue "warmth and grit" they can add to a mix. I was browsing through these looking for a Waves SSL alternative, and it struck me just how arbitrary the module components seem to be. I'm talking about VMR, VCC, VBC, VPC, FG-X, Custom series, etc. Anyone else find the Slate Digital stuff over-packaged and confusing?