I know, but that's wishful thinking at this time. Priorities for post folks are time-based grids, automation features and editing improvements like edit groups and area selection. The subset of people who need to import OMF and AAF files are mostly clients who won't mind paying $160 for a well supported conversion tool, and $30 for Parallels or VMWare Fusion. I've swapped editing sessions with Wavelab users with ADL (AES31) session files. Some people exchange sessions with Audition users. AATranslator is extremely useful and it's just a fact of life right now that Mac users have to spend what is actually less money than Protools and ProConvert users to get these files working in Reaper. OMF and AAF files are only important in a professional setting, so the choice is easy if you intend to work with Reaper.
------------------------------ "I'd probably take the E30 M3 in this case just because I love that little car, and how tanky that inline 6 is." - thecj
One rarely mentioned alternative for importing OMFs into Reaper is using Samplitude to open it and then saving it straight to EDL format, wich is native both to Samplitude and Reaper. The big drawback here is that Samplitude is windows only and also fairly expensive ($500+), but the conversion is absolutely flawless. AAtranslator is a cost effective alternative, but sometimes the OMF conversion doesn't work as it should. It's a tricky file format.