Isn't that what Kickstarter is for?knowix wrote:Yeah, but who'll pony up the cash to get him one of those rather expensive synths...?
If Patrick does the Jupiter 8 to the same standard as his other emus, count me in.
Isn't that what Kickstarter is for?knowix wrote:Yeah, but who'll pony up the cash to get him one of those rather expensive synths...?
And what if it was the MKS-80 Super Jupiter instead? Perhaps with a touch (like adding the 2-pole switch to the filter). Would that be interesting?bstageboss wrote:Isn't that what Kickstarter is for?knowix wrote:Yeah, but who'll pony up the cash to get him one of those rather expensive synths...?
If Patrick does the Jupiter 8 to the same standard as his other emus, count me in.
Great. I am trying to persuade Patrick to get his hands in this. I even told him I would loan my own MKS-80 for the project. Let's see what the future bringsEvilDragon wrote:I would definitely like an MKS-80 rev 4!
In fact, at some point I'm pretty sure I'll purchase one. But their prices are starting to get crazy!
I feel the same.EvilDragon wrote:In fact, at some point I'm pretty sure I'll purchase one.
In which sense?EvilDragon wrote:But their prices are starting to get crazy!
I love his synths but I don't know him. Perhaps he has to face financial hardships and must do compromises between close the door or keep his activity alive at the price of a very little staff and of products a little more expensive than he would himself...EvilDragon wrote:A - tending to get more and more expensive. They're starting to breach $1800 even without the programmer! A year or two ago you could get it for ~$1000, sometimes $1200 along with the programmer!
BlackWinny wrote:I love his synths but I don't know him. Perhaps he has to face financial hardships and must do compromises between close the door or keep his activity alive at the price of a very little staff and of products a little more expensive than he would himself...EvilDragon wrote:A - tending to get more and more expensive. They're starting to breach $1800 even without the programmer! A year or two ago you could get it for ~$1000, sometimes $1200 along with the programmer!
I have had in my family someone who faced the same problem ten years ago. Today his society is still alive, he has saved it by this solution of very little staff and prices a little more expensive than he would at the moment of to make a critical choice... and he has afterwards balanced the price a little expensive of the bad years by a total stability for ten years of all his products avoiding any price rise.
Maybe Patrick faces the same problem and has choosen the same solution.
I don't know...
Actually, I'm not sure. Is there a way to know? Serial numbers or something (I don't even know if these units have serial numbers, but I think they have.EvilDragon wrote:Is your rev 4 or 5?
I wonder if it actually becomes true, it would be cool to have a rev 4/5 switch on the GUI
That's cool. Also, if he got a reasonable emu of the MKS-80 going, he could rent a Jupiter 8, for a short time, to tune in the finer details of its characteristics instead. Saying it's a Jupiter 8 emu would carry a lot more weight than the MSK-80, after all.fmr wrote: Great. I am trying to persuade Patrick to get his hands in this. I even told him I would loan my own MKS-80 for the project. Let's see what the future brings
Oh my god !fmr wrote:
I think you are confusing things here BlackWinny. EvilDragon is referring to the prices of REAL hardware MKS-80s, not Patrick products. Patrick was releasing software for free until recently, when he released U-NO-LX (an emulation of the Juno-60) and Bassline-101 (an emulation of the SH-101). And both are priced really cheap. What is going up madly are the prices of the hardware.
That's absolutely certain.knowix wrote:Saying it's a Jupiter 8 emu would carry a lot more weight than the MSK-80, after all.
Yes, it's easy to find out. Serials below 511800 are rev 4, above are rev 5.fmr wrote:Actually, I'm not sure. Is there a way to know? Serial numbers or something (I don't even know if these units have serial numbers, but I think they have.EvilDragon wrote:Is your rev 4 or 5?
I wonder if it actually becomes true, it would be cool to have a rev 4/5 switch on the GUI
Then it's a rev 5 (serial # 593471)EvilDragon wrote:Yes, it's easy to find out. Serials below 511800 are rev 4, above are rev 5.fmr wrote:Actually, I'm not sure. Is there a way to know? Serial numbers or something (I don't even know if these units have serial numbers, but I think they have.EvilDragon wrote:Is your rev 4 or 5?
I wonder if it actually becomes true, it would be cool to have a rev 4/5 switch on the GUI
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