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jupiter8 wrote: Nonsense.
Which part of it? |
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| ^ | Joined: 06 Feb 2012 Member: #274481 | ||
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D.Josef wrote: jupiter8 wrote: Nonsense.
Which part of it? All of it except maybe for this: D.Josef wrote: but I think physical instruments - be they electronic or acoustic ones - will continue to play a very important role in music. ---- At school they taught me how to be. So pure in thought and word and deed. They didn't quite succeed. |
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| ^ | Joined: 17 Sep 2002 Member: #3863 Location: Gothenburg Sweden | ||
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Haha. Care to elaborate?
Of course I am aware of the Nyquist frequency. But currently, hardware still has the edge, because inaudible overtones that are above the human hearing limit will produce audible artifacts through heterodyning. Now time to time this is intentional, or becomes part of the signature sound, like in the Supersaw. Sometimes you don't want it. |
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| ^ | Joined: 06 Feb 2012 Member: #274481 | ||
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UltraJv wrote: What do these have in common?
Roland : Virtual Canvas. Korg : Legacy collection Akai : Various old FX plugins They are all but discontinued. The pattern here is obvious. After having tried the plugin market, the big 3 still make hardware and have given up on software. The new Akai Renaissance/Studio is not "hardware". It is software + a controller/audio interface. Korg still sells software for the iPad. Roland's "Virtual Canvas" was a joke. And you conveniently forgot Yamaha. |
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| ^ | Joined: 31 Jan 2003 Member: #5693 Location: Ghent, Belgium | ||
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T-CM11 wrote: Korg still sells software for the iPad. Korg still sells software for the PC & Mac. And if you need to ask... Legacy Collection. |
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| ^ | Joined: 05 May 2007 Member: #149841 Location: Finland | ||
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I meant: they come up with new stuff for the iPad (recently) |
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| ^ | Joined: 31 Jan 2003 Member: #5693 Location: Ghent, Belgium | ||
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VitaminD wrote: the software market is already saturated.. I suspect most hardware manufacturers will stay with hardware as a result.. software isnt largely becoming hardware so they are 'safe' so to speak..
What they COULD do, however, is make more VST interfaces for their products much like Access did with the Virus TI.. I think Roland also does it to some degree.. I want to see more iPad Interfaces, Software or Hardware. Alchemy is a good Example. ---- new Dusk to Dawn Song ! Synth-Pop / New-Wave https://soundcloud.com/dusktodawn/dusk-to-dawn-traces-synth-pop |
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| ^ | Joined: 14 Sep 2007 Member: #159991 Location: www.koeln.de/en/ | ||
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bobbybland wrote: My question is how long do you think before Roland,Yamaha,Access,Kurzweil jump on board? Making real plugins of their stuff, if ever?? Five years, three months and four days. |
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| ^ | Joined: 27 Jul 2005 Member: #76240 Location: the wilds of wanny | ||
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Do I need to point out the obvious? Hardware can't be pirated and distributed over the internet. Pick any of your favorite soft synths and do a Google search. You will find dozens of sites giving away pirated copies of the latest version of the software. Keeping things in hardware or requiring a hardware component solves that problem. Why would any of these companies willingly put themselves in that position when they don't need to.
If you want these companies to make software-only versions of their hardware, you have to support those people and organizations working to protect copyright. Without it, the business case for software-only is much less compelling. If you thought you didn't have a personal stake in the copyright debate, now you do. ---- This space has been unintentionally left blank. |
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| ^ | Joined: 26 Nov 2005 Member: #89033 | ||
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JJBiener wrote: If you want these companies to make software-only versions of their hardware, you have to support those people and organizations working to protect copyright. Support the RIAA, MPAA, ...? I'd rather give my money to organised crime. Not that there's much difference |
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| ^ | Joined: 31 Jan 2003 Member: #5693 Location: Ghent, Belgium | ||
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T-CM11 wrote: JJBiener wrote: If you want these companies to make software-only versions of their hardware, you have to support those people and organizations working to protect copyright. Support the RIAA, MPAA, ...? I'd rather give my money to organised crime. Not that there's much difference This. I buy software not 'cause i am scared of someone, but just 'cause i i want to support the developer and have always access to the latest update. Devs behind Reaper and U-He taught a lot to me. Organisations like RIAA in Italy are defending the rights only of the biggest players in the game and creating a lot of problems (bureaucracy and expenses) for the little ones. Hardware is nice but software is my choice. |
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| ^ | Joined: 12 Mar 2010 Member: #227711 | ||
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T-CM11 wrote: JJBiener wrote: If you want these companies to make software-only versions of their hardware, you have to support those people and organizations working to protect copyright. Support the RIAA, MPAA, ...? I'd rather give my money to organised crime. Not that there's much difference Lawrence Lessig would be proud of you. ---- This space has been unintentionally left blank. |
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| ^ | Joined: 26 Nov 2005 Member: #89033 | ||
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alphadelphi wrote: This. I buy software not 'cause i am scared of someone, but just 'cause i i want to support the developer and have always access to the latest update. Devs behind Reaper and U-He taught a lot to me. Organisations like RIAA in Italy are defending the rights only of the biggest players in the game and creating a lot of problems (bureaucracy and expenses) for the little ones. Hardware is nice but software is my choice. I buy software because it is illegal and immoral to take someone's property without compensating them for it. The RIAA can't defend the rights of some without defending the rights of all. They aren't the ones causing the problems. It is the ones who insist on illegally distributing copyrighted material that are the problem. The only reason RIAA is involved at all is because governments are not defending the rights of those who create and own copyrighted material. If governments were to take their role of defending private property in the case of intellectual property as seriously as they defend the right of other property owners, the RIAA and the MPAA and other groups would be more than happy to step aside. ---- This space has been unintentionally left blank. Last edited by JJBiener on Wed Apr 11, 2012 11:14 am; edited 1 time in total |
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| ^ | Joined: 26 Nov 2005 Member: #89033 | ||
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The end does not always justify the means. |
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| ^ | Joined: 31 Jan 2003 Member: #5693 Location: Ghent, Belgium | ||
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JJBiener wrote: If you want these companies to make software-only versions of their hardware, you have to support those people and organizations working to protect copyright. Without it, the business case for software-only is much less compelling. If you thought you didn't have a personal stake in the copyright debate, now you do.
Yes, Just like we need more (body/shoe/metal) scanners in airports to protect us from terrorists and more prisons to resolve the high crime rates.. The issue is significantly moral/interpersonal which is largely resolved by education.. at home.. not with extreme legislation of freedoms and forceful deterrence. Yes, I doubt this will happen.. but the other way doesn't work either (legislation+prisons). ---- "Use the talents you possess, for the woods would be very silent if no birds sang except the best." - Henry Van Dyke |
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| ^ | Joined: 11 Mar 2002 Member: #2027 Location: in a state of confusion |
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