Me!Kriminal wrote: who is to say that UserA made good presets, and UserB made bad ones?
Zen
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- Banned
- 18651 posts since 2 Oct, 2001 from England
the problem i see is, no-one uses the same stuff, so most ppl prob cant test anything until they have a bigger list in the databasecrimsonwarlock wrote:His aim is to include as many as possible, but he wants to test a little with each new inclusion to be able to keep an eye on stable performance with each new VSTi that's added. I have quite a list of plugins to request for inclusion (at least the ones I use) but I see no problem when they get included one at the time over a period of time.Kriminal wrote:i thought you wanted as many as you could get...'hopefully every vst will be included' or something like that...?
so, if im understanding you correctly, i need a designer key to get my own presets into the database? (assuming it stops crashing first of course)
- KVRAF
- 5234 posts since 25 Feb, 2008
An obvious tautology, but a lot of people use the really popular plugins - Zebra, ACE, Synth1, Massive etc. Many people will own more than one.Kriminal wrote:the problem i see is, no-one uses the same stuff, so most ppl prob cant test anything until they have a bigger list in the database
And anyway Tick has said that the eventual aim is to cover as many plugins as possible.
Yes - that is to upload them to the global database, where they can be distributed amongst all users. You can import your own patches into your local database without a key.so, if im understanding you correctly, i need a designer key to get my own presets into the database?
- KVRAF
- 2784 posts since 18 Apr, 2001
OK guys, just cool it in the 'quality control' statement....
I just meant: personal quality control from the designers pov. What I maybe should have added is that when you upload a preset, you loose control over it. So if you upload just anything that comes up sound-wise then later on you might regret putting certain patches online. In this regard ZEN completely follows what is being said about the internet time and time again: what goes on the internet, stays on the internet
I was just talking from my own pov that I'm pretty cautious before hitting that upload button on a patch
Quality control on the user side is something that will sort itself: someone uses the presets he likes and simply ignores the ones that are garbage (to him personally). However, if there is a lot of REAL garbage being uploaded to the database then a user might have to plow through a lot of unwanted stuff to find the few real good ones.
Having said that, Tick gave me a designer key the moment I asked for it. I'm happy he did but there is also a possible problem with that; if anyone can get a designer key without any credibility then the chance is that people who just dabble a bit with a plugin start uploading presets that are, let's say, sub-standard. Think about the preset-generator in Oatmeal; with that everyone thinks he can be a sound designer (tbh I already have seen several Oatmeal banks that are obviously made by ONLY clicking that generate-button).
I do have some credibility in the community, been around a decade or so and worked with many devs and companies (mainly beta-testing) but I never released any of my patches before. So there is no way to know if I'm just a dabbler or not (I'm not btw, have been programming my own sounds for 30 years now
). In contrast Krim has released patches for many synths (I have several of his banks myself, I do use presets as well).
I just meant: personal quality control from the designers pov. What I maybe should have added is that when you upload a preset, you loose control over it. So if you upload just anything that comes up sound-wise then later on you might regret putting certain patches online. In this regard ZEN completely follows what is being said about the internet time and time again: what goes on the internet, stays on the internet
I was just talking from my own pov that I'm pretty cautious before hitting that upload button on a patch
Quality control on the user side is something that will sort itself: someone uses the presets he likes and simply ignores the ones that are garbage (to him personally). However, if there is a lot of REAL garbage being uploaded to the database then a user might have to plow through a lot of unwanted stuff to find the few real good ones.
Having said that, Tick gave me a designer key the moment I asked for it. I'm happy he did but there is also a possible problem with that; if anyone can get a designer key without any credibility then the chance is that people who just dabble a bit with a plugin start uploading presets that are, let's say, sub-standard. Think about the preset-generator in Oatmeal; with that everyone thinks he can be a sound designer (tbh I already have seen several Oatmeal banks that are obviously made by ONLY clicking that generate-button).
I do have some credibility in the community, been around a decade or so and worked with many devs and companies (mainly beta-testing) but I never released any of my patches before. So there is no way to know if I'm just a dabbler or not (I'm not btw, have been programming my own sounds for 30 years now
CrimsonWarlock aka TechnoGremlin, Moved to Reason and Rack Extensions exclusively (from Reaper and VSTs) several years ago.
- KVRAF
- 37405 posts since 14 Sep, 2002 from In teh net
Can we have TripleCheese support please (and Uhbik when we get an fx version)
ta
ta
- KVRAF
- 2784 posts since 18 Apr, 2001
Question to Tick:
While I'm thinking about Krim's patches I see a possible problem: If I locally add his patches to my database, what happens when Krim starts adding his own patches to the shared database and they get downloaded. You said that you can't add a preset twice to prevent double entries, so how is this handled?
While I'm thinking about Krim's patches I see a possible problem: If I locally add his patches to my database, what happens when Krim starts adding his own patches to the shared database and they get downloaded. You said that you can't add a preset twice to prevent double entries, so how is this handled?
CrimsonWarlock aka TechnoGremlin, Moved to Reason and Rack Extensions exclusively (from Reaper and VSTs) several years ago.
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- Banned
- 18651 posts since 2 Oct, 2001 from England
TBH, most of my presets are pretty amateur, until recently (last 2 years i'd say) i didnt really take it that seriously, just dabbling...crimsonwarlock wrote:Question to Tick:
While I'm thinking about Krim's patches I see a possible problem: If I locally add his patches to my database, what happens when Krim starts adding his own patches to the shared database and they get downloaded. You said that you can't add a preset twice to prevent double entries, so how is this handled?
so, with regards to you quandry, i would only be uploading new presets that no-one has had before, so not a problem
- KVRAF
- 2784 posts since 18 Apr, 2001
There's still some pretty good stuff you made floating aroundKriminal wrote:TBH, most of my presets are pretty amateur, until recently (last 2 years i'd say) i didnt really take it that seriously, just dabbling...
so, with regards to you quandry, i would only be uploading new presets that no-one has had before, so not a problem
However regardless, the possible conflict might arise between patches added to the global database AFTER someone has put them in his/hers personal database.
CrimsonWarlock aka TechnoGremlin, Moved to Reason and Rack Extensions exclusively (from Reaper and VSTs) several years ago.
- KVRAF
- 5234 posts since 25 Feb, 2008
Guys? Krim got his knickers slightly in a twist ("totally unacceptable!"), but I thought my response was fairly reasonable.crimsonwarlock wrote:OK guys, just cool it in the 'quality control' statement....
if there is a lot of REAL garbage being uploaded to the database then a user might have to plow through a lot of unwanted stuff to find the few real good ones.
Unfortunately it's inevitable that much of the content will, from any one user's subjective view, be garbage.
And Synth1 being the obvious example - 9000 odd patches, a fair number of nice, well balanced, usable or interesting patches, but a good deal more *ahem* 'less good' patches amongst them.
There's not much you can do about that. As I said, an Ignore tag to hide unwanted patches, plus filtering by user rating (of patches, patchbanks, authors etc), seem to me practical ways for sorting subjectively good from subjectively bad.
if anyone can get a designer key without any credibility then the chance is that people who just dabble a bit with a plugin start uploading presets that are, let's say, sub-standard.
But then the problem becomes where do you set the bar for who qualifies as a credible sound designer? I'm a dabbler, I don't really have any official credentials to submit, but I think I might be able to make a modest positive contribution. I'm sure that there's many like me.
That said, a potential problem that might arise where a lot of keys are given out indiscriminately is that of people uploading other author's patches without their permission. No doubt Tick has made contingency plans for this - I guess banning the offending user and removing all of their uploads. Perhaps there should be an explicit rule stating that author's can only upload their own patches (and an author/uploader tag automatically be appended at upload)?
- KVRAF
- 2784 posts since 18 Apr, 2001
OK, I forgot to put a smiley with that sentence, so here you have twohakey wrote:Guys? Krim got his knickers slightly in a twist ("totally unacceptable!"), but I thought my response was fairly reasonable.crimsonwarlock wrote:OK guys, just cool it in the 'quality control' statement....
Ah, good suggestions.hakey wrote:if there is a lot of REAL garbage being uploaded to the database then a user might have to plow through a lot of unwanted stuff to find the few real good ones.
Unfortunately it's inevitable that much of the content will, from any one user's subjective view, be garbage.
And Synth1 being the obvious example - 9000 odd patches, a fair number of nice, well balanced, usable or interesting patches, but a good deal more *ahem* 'less good' patches amongst them.
There's not much you can do about that. As I said, an Ignore tag to hide unwanted patches, plus filtering by user rating (of patches, patchbanks, authors etc), seem to me practical ways for sorting subjectively good from subjectively bad.
Ahum, I think your patches qualify quite a bit above 'dabbling'hakey wrote:if anyone can get a designer key without any credibility then the chance is that people who just dabble a bit with a plugin start uploading presets that are, let's say, sub-standard.
But then the problem becomes where do you set the bar for who qualifies as a credible sound designer? I'm a dabbler, I don't really have any official credentials to submit, but I think I might be able to make a modest positive contribution. I'm sure that there's many like me.
Problem with that is that we can not get 'legacy banks' (like those from TC, may he RIP) into the system. I'm already discussing with Tick to help him getting such banks into ZEN and properly tagged. I think it's also important to get these banks into ZEN to prevent other 'dabblers' to upload those patches as if they are theirs.hakey wrote:Perhaps there should be an explicit rule stating that author's can only upload their own patches (and an author/uploader tag automatically be appended at upload)?
CrimsonWarlock aka TechnoGremlin, Moved to Reason and Rack Extensions exclusively (from Reaper and VSTs) several years ago.
- KVRAF
- 5234 posts since 25 Feb, 2008
Perhaps there could be something like administrator level access for a few trusted uploaders like yourself, who would be allowed to upload other author's patches only where it is appropriate (legacy banks and the like)?I'm already discussing with Tick to help him getting such banks into ZEN and properly tagged. I think it's also important to get these banks into ZEN to prevent other 'dabblers' to upload those patches as if they are theirs.
(and thanks for that nice comment!
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- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 3388 posts since 29 May, 2001 from New York, NY
When your Zen downloads Krim's public preset, it detects that it is a duplicate of a local preset. Any tags you had set for the local preset are applied to the public one, and then the local preset is removed.crimsonwarlock wrote:While I'm thinking about Krim's patches I see a possible problem: If I locally add his patches to my database, what happens when Krim starts adding his own patches to the shared database and they get downloaded. You said that you can't add a preset twice to prevent double entries, so how is this handled?
Duplicate detection is based on a CRC of the preset data. Some synths, unfortunately, save random or user-specific data along with the preset. So in this case, dupe detection won't work, and you'll have both presets in your database.
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- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 3388 posts since 29 May, 2001 from New York, NY
Only if you want to publish them and share them with others.Kriminal wrote:so, if im understanding you correctly, i need a designer key to get my own presets into the database? (assuming it stops crashing first of course)
I only give keys to people I know, or people who have already been contributing presets to the community. So no dabblers here.hakey wrote:a potential problem that might arise where a lot of keys are given out indiscriminately is that of people uploading other author's patches without their permission. No doubt Tick has made contingency plans for this - I guess banning the offending user and removing all of their uploads.
Also, anyone with a designer key can import, say, Tim Conrardy's presets and tag them as his. But, believe me, at some point (and probably very quickly) someone will notice.
Exactly. The last thing I (we all) need is issues with people uploading illegal content.No doubt Tick has made contingency plans for this - I guess banning the offending user and removing all of their uploads.
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- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 3388 posts since 29 May, 2001 from New York, NY
Yes, this would make sense as a platform with "social" features: you could have public groups, private groups, and decide which groups are allowed to download which presets. At the moment, though, there is only 1 group: all usershakey wrote:Will it be possible for an author to limit access to a given patch/patchbank to certain users?
