Oatmeal (mediocre free VSTi) - 37-4 (fixed Renoise problem)
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- KVRAF
- 3191 posts since 20 Sep, 2004 from Atlanta
I'm not where I can test this now, but I *think* that holding the shift dwn while adjusting *may* give sensitivity?...maybe it's senility or just confusion, but me thinks it works this way in Oatmeal?P.T. wrote:I think that maybe some of the knobs are a bit too sensitive.
The EQ section especially. Just a small turn gives a huge increase or decrease.
I'll test when I get home and delete this if I'm wrong
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- KVRian
- 1258 posts since 25 Nov, 2003 from London
I'd love the knobs in the sequencer to be quantisable too.P.T. wrote:I think that maybe some of the knobs are a bit too sensitive.
The EQ section especially. Just a small turn gives a huge increase or decrease.
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- KVRAF
- 3441 posts since 15 Mar, 2003
Yes, shift makes them less sensitive, but it shoudn't be nessecary except for very precise adjustments.
The way it is now, just a tiny move of an EQ knob and you are practically blowing opt the speakers.
The way it is now, just a tiny move of an EQ knob and you are practically blowing opt the speakers.
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 250 posts since 17 Jun, 2004 from Magdeburg
Holding shift and/or control and moving the mouse horizontally instead of vertically should do the trick... to be honest, I can't see the problem unless maybe you have your mouse set to move insanely quickly.
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- KVRian
- 534 posts since 22 Mar, 2006 from Adelaide, Australia
holding Ctrl gives less sensitivity for me, and shift gives even less....
edit oh hi Fuzz - i missed ur post
edit oh hi Fuzz - i missed ur post
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- KVRAF
- 3441 posts since 15 Mar, 2003
It's the same mouse that I use on everything else.
The dial on the EQ boost hardly moves and the volume increases dramatically.
The dial on the EQ boost hardly moves and the volume increases dramatically.
Last edited by P.T. on Fri Jun 02, 2006 2:38 am, edited 1 time in total.
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- KVRian
- 534 posts since 22 Mar, 2006 from Adelaide, Australia
Its nowhere near like that for me > the knob adjustments are very nice as far as I have experienced it...P.T. wrote:The way it is now, just a tiny move of an EQ knob and you are practically blowing out the speakers.
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- KVRian
- 534 posts since 22 Mar, 2006 from Adelaide, Australia
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 250 posts since 17 Jun, 2004 from Magdeburg
I don't know... I was on 98 when I started developing Oatmeal, and it always behaved fine. Unfortunately I don't have 98 installed anymore, so I can't check...
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Reverse Engineer Reverse Engineer https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=9129
- KVRAF
- 4968 posts since 23 Sep, 2003 from Glasgow
The knobs behave fine for me too, sometimes I move the mouse too much, but that's not really anyone elses prob. 
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discordianvision discordianvision https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=65047
- KVRer
- 10 posts since 13 Apr, 2005
I think I know what P.T. is talking about. It's because the EQ gain is an
eye-popping +60db on a *little* slider. Great for sound sculpting, but just a *little* twitch and you have a +26db boost!
Great for testing the durability of your monitor speakers. (Mine didn't explode, thank goodness.)
Is their any way you can scale the slider sensitivity down a little, Fuzz?
Great for testing the durability of your monitor speakers. (Mine didn't explode, thank goodness.)
Is their any way you can scale the slider sensitivity down a little, Fuzz?
We. We are. We are our. We are ourselves.
We are our elves!
We are our elves!
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ChocoLatteRabbit ChocoLatteRabbit https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=98806
- KVRist
- 97 posts since 19 Feb, 2006 from An icon on my desktoop
About the knob sensitivity - I'm still using Win98SE and what works here is to do exactly like Fuzzpilz suggests. I get close using mouse only, and then hold control and shift and move the mouse - and try going almost horizontally - do exactly like FuzzPilz suggests. It would be difficult any other way fuzzpilz were to set the gui up, given the wide ranges involved in some of the controls. Dual knobs? - I suppose, but then we'd talk about a cluttered gui. And this is much handier than sorting out dual knobs. For fine tune, it's always ctrl + shift + left click mouse. And you don't have to let up on the mouse button before pushing ctrl + shift. Try it "hot."
Cheers,
ps, Thanks Fuzzpilz, for making the entire additive harmonic spectrum scrollable with the right click on the mouse.
Cheers,
ps, Thanks Fuzzpilz, for making the entire additive harmonic spectrum scrollable with the right click on the mouse.
ChocoLatteRabbit
"They often calls me coffee 'cause I grinds so fine."
Unknown bluesman
"They often calls me coffee 'cause I grinds so fine."
Unknown bluesman
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- KVRAF
- 3441 posts since 15 Mar, 2003
I really don't get you guys.
I have dozens of synths and a few EQs and none of them have such sensitive controls.
If that is how the developer wants it then that is fine.
I just don't see how people think it is normal or think that amount of sensitivity is normal, that you need to use fine tune mode for just about any adjustment.
Great synth none the less.
I have dozens of synths and a few EQs and none of them have such sensitive controls.
If that is how the developer wants it then that is fine.
I just don't see how people think it is normal or think that amount of sensitivity is normal, that you need to use fine tune mode for just about any adjustment.
Great synth none the less.
