Well, for a start off, Fran, you really need to read the PA2 manual before you make comparisons. The PA2 has FULL, synth-like voice editing (full ADSR, for instance, Roland has ADR) LFO type as well as rate and depth and delay, and many other things. Basically, it is close to a full Triton voice editing. THEN, on top of all the additional power, Korg actually allows you to STORE a voice edit for later recall. Roland has no way to store your edits so that they become a USER Tone, for recall at any time. Want to use an edited Tone in a live setup? You have to repeat making all the edits!
It's a PITA.
I have no idea what you are smoking, but to even SUGGEST that the G70 has anywhere near the Korg's tone edit capability only demonstrates your lack of knowledge. Sorry to be harsh here, but those are the facts.
Even the PA1 manual has over twenty pages about the voice editing. Try actually READING them before you make completely erroneous misstatements like that, dude...
As for arps being different to arranger usage, Well DUH!
Of course it is different. But it depends on what kind of music you are making. Old school, bigband, jazz, etc., the arranger is going to rule. But chilldown, acid jazz, ambient, triphop, for those kinds of styles, the WS rules. You have got to look out past your own narrow range of styles before you can make such sweeping statements, Fran.
The truth anyone that thinks the workstation rules..has not worked an arranger to it's up most capabilities...
That's a pretty amazing statement from someone that so far has failed to show any mastery of the arranger himself. Or, for that matter, any music from the MS to show you have any right to claim its' superiority.
Personally, I think that anyone that actually DOES get a mastery of either form of keyboard is capable of wowing us all. It is still down to the player, IMO...
[This message has been edited by Diki (edited 08-20-2009).]