TaoManna Don wrote:Your quote from the press release might be missing a few words. I've inserted in red what they probably meant:Vocalpoint Studios wrote:I have heard of missing a release date slightly but cmon already! - right from their own damn press release:
Price, availability, upgrades
SampleTank 2.1® XL will have a suggested retail price of $/€499and is expected to be shipping in May 2005.
By my watch - tis about 9 days until October - what's the deal?
Price, availability, upgrades
SampleTank 2.1® XL will have a suggested retail price of $/€499and is expected to be shipping in Maybe 2005 and Maybe 2006.
Sampletank 2.1 - What the heck is going on?
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- KVRist
- 101 posts since 20 Mar, 2004 from An Island in the Pacific....in Canada.
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- KVRAF
- 4692 posts since 28 Jan, 2003 from In these very interwebs
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- KVRian
- 1256 posts since 22 Aug, 2003
Hm - how exactly do you figure that Philharmonik has scroll wheel support? It certainly doesn't have scroll wheel support in any of MY hosts....
What host are you using to test this with?
What host are you using to test this with?
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- Skunk Mod
- 21249 posts since 10 Jun, 2004 from Pony Pasture
My (meager) understanding of the issue is that it's up to the host to use the scroll wheel signals itself, or to pass them on to plug-ins. I might be wrong about that. (Please someone let me know if that's the case!) But if it's so, and if the host doesn't pass wheel events along, I'm thinking there's nothing a plug can do to seize those events.
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- KVRAF
- 4692 posts since 28 Jan, 2003 from In these very interwebs
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- KVRian
- 1256 posts since 22 Aug, 2003
I'm using energyXT and FLStudio5 on WindowsXP - both of these work fine with other Scroll-Wheel VST's (namely z3ta+) so they definitely pass along the signal.
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- KVRAF
- 4878 posts since 13 Jun, 2002 from Montreal
I eschew the dongle and thus Philharmonik! I really don't trust it.Beardedone wrote:
Quote:
You don't have Philharmonik? You have to get it now!
-Kim.
Hey Beardedone, why so down?
-Kim.
Gordon
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- KVRAF
- 4222 posts since 23 Feb, 2004 from Tucson Arizona USA
One step in the right direction might be a written binding statement from the publisher, that ensures when the company goes out of business or the product is discontinued that the copy protection will be removed.Beardedone wrote:
I eschew the dongle and thus Philharmonik! I really don't trust it.
Gordon
Without a contract like that, your creative work is locked away from you at the whim of another company.
That is unacceptable because it is ultimately a potential, if not a certain, abridgement of your copyright.
The publisher's copyright should not exist only at the expense of yours.
This is a much more serious problem than I think the company acknowledges. I cannot buy their product because to do so would mean surrendering some of my own copyright, and could mean being locked out of my work sometime in the future.
Software companies come and go. Do you really want it to be impossible to reproduce your own creative work, some years down the road, just because a software company went out of business? I've watched them come and go. It's not a compromise I would ever be willing to make.
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- KVRAF
- 4878 posts since 13 Jun, 2002 from Montreal
Exactly my concerns as well, James! Thanks for expressing this so well.
Sincerely,
Gordon
Sincerely,
Gordon
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- KVRian
- 1157 posts since 1 Apr, 2003 from Good old Germany
That is actually a nice idea. Not necessary for a discontinued product though, as long as the company still supports you. So, to make it more precise it should be when support and further developement is stopped for the product in such a way that you could not get a new key if necessary.james0tucson wrote: One step in the right direction might be a written binding statement from the publisher, that ensures when the company goes out of business or the product is discontinued that the copy protection will be removed.
In case of Philharmonik, we got 2 companies involved in the product, so the chances that both go out of business is really lower than low.
Personally I do not have much concerns about these things, but this is a suggestion which is doable by a company without too much effort.
tele
Listen to me at soundcklick:
www.soundclick.com/wewritesongs
www.soundclick.com/wewritesongs
- Sonic Reality Head Chef
- 8566 posts since 11 Mar, 2002 from Florida
Live life now and enjoy it.
I see what you mean. But, I can't see us letting people down like that. Still, understandable. Who knows, maybe I have a good solution for the Bearded in the works. 
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- KVRAF
- 4692 posts since 28 Jan, 2003 from In these very interwebs
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- KVRAF
- 4878 posts since 13 Jun, 2002 from Montreal
Thanks Dave! I look forward to see what you come up with.Live life now and enjoy it. I see what you mean. But, I can't see us letting people down like that. Still, understandable. Who knows, maybe I have a good solution for the Bearded in the works.
Cheers,
Gordon
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- KVRer
- 16 posts since 4 May, 2002 from USA
....
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- KVRAF
- 4222 posts since 23 Feb, 2004 from Tucson Arizona USA
Kim (esoundz) wrote:It's not just software that has this problem - if you compose a piece of music and record some human instrumentalists performing your work, are you going to make them sign a contract that they'll always be around in case you want to rewrite and rerecord it in the future?
-Kim.
No, but you're missing something fundamental -- they haven't created a situation whereby it will become impossible to use their work product at some arbitrary time in the future. Their master wav doesn't self destruct when the contract expires, or when I change the light bulbs in my studio, or when they die, or when I do.
In the case of dongled, and some call-home software, that *does* happen. I get locked out of my project at some arbitrary point in the future. I can't store a project that depends on specific software, together with the software product, in a time capsule, and have people in 2125 open it and pick up where I left off.
Unfortunately for certain software vendors, that's my litmus test for whether I can use a product in good conscience. I refuse to compromise my own rights in order to preserve someone else's, especially when they try to enter into the relationship already framing me as the bad guy.

