Well...what about those who don't have a Kronos? Especially young musicians who can at last thanks to their day job afford an expensive keyboard.Derek Cook wrote:(...) if ever I met somebody who has exhausted everything the Kronos can do(...)
The Kronos is not to sell anymore.
I bought a second hand X3R when I was 19yo with holiday's work money. I had to wait until I was 25 yo, with a real job, to buy a second hand Triton pro X.
My purchase was motivated because I had the chance to have a friend whom father bought a Korg T1 when we were 14yo (and we installed Cubase 1.0 on a Atari 520ST too...

I fell sad for young musicians, Korg enthousiasts because they've seen a Kronos (or an Oasys), who are restricted to wait few years for an hypothetic Oasys II, or buy a Nautilus which is indicated by all Korg owners as "do not buy".
A communication issue?
What can do Korg? If they say "a new workstation is in preparation and be in the market in 2 years"...nobody would buy the Nautilus.
What about no Nautilus at all? The issue is with the Karma. Korg do not have the (copy)right anymore to sell any Karma. So Korg cannot sell any new Kronos. I agree that would have been a huge bold communication if Korg said "we prefer not to sell a quick and dirty copy of the Kronos; please wait for the next gen workstation.
I think there are a lot of similarities between the Nautilus and the M3

Else what improvements on an Oasys II/new Kronos? (because no, the Kronos is far, really far, from being perfect) :
- start delay -> seriously 2min to start in 2022? (Kronos or Nautilus)...I'm not such a Windows XP nostalgic.
- Integrated Daw -> let a workstation BE a workstation : bigger screen (and possibility to plug some external screen/keyboard), cubase-like tools to manage audio/midi tracks, integration of external VST (yes, that would be a game changer), pro mastering/finishing integrated tools
- dynamic physical interface -> faders, "infinite" knobs, but with some little lcd screen indicating what parameter they change (not a futuristic technology though), not only helping in the DAW mode, but in analogic keyboard mode, or even in performance mode.
- way better horns, winds, and voices sounds. Keyboards, strings, pianos, organs are super good in the actual Korg products, but the horns and winds instruments are quite bad. I may even think about the synthetic voices who can be really improved in quality and not be just some samples. So 3 new sounds motors (wood winds, metal winds, voices).
That may sound like a Christmass list, but there is another point of view.
Either the future workstation will compete with computers DAW, or the future workstation would be restricted to a "niche" of old musicians, while the majority of musicians will do an easy calculation : price of a PC+DAW+master keyboard VS price of a workstation. The first is way cheaper and have way more functionnalities. Choice done.
...so Korg will have no economic interest in investing time and money in a workstation while basic products like the Modwave, Opsix, wavestate are cheap to conceive, cheap to produce and their prices target a wide range of musicians...including the DAW users.