Just demo'd ACE
- KVRAF
- 14240 posts since 20 Nov, 2003 from Lost and Spaced
Love the sound, but sometimes 60 percent CPU on my Pentium dual core with 3 Gb Ram. - Yikes!
I'm wondering about the wave display window, Urs. Would it make any difference if that could be turned off?
Just a thought.
I'm wondering about the wave display window, Urs. Would it make any difference if that could be turned off?
Just a thought.
- KVRAF
- 8644 posts since 2 Oct, 2006 from Leeds, UK
Did you try the lower quality settings? They make a big difference.
Latest release and Socials: https://linktr.ee/ph.i.ltr3
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- Banned
- 159 posts since 19 Oct, 2010
Oddly enough, there are vast differences in how a certain sound erm... sounds between low/normal/high settings!musikmachine wrote:Did you try the lower quality settings? They make a big difference.
So, if you think you've got a sound "right" when using ACE in the low setting, and then turn to "high" to render, it may not sound "right" any longer. Then what? Back to square "A".
Just saying.
- KVRAF
- 26978 posts since 3 Feb, 2005 from in the wilds
If you got a sound right on a lower quality setting, then just use the lower setting...jazztard wrote:Oddly enough, there are vast differences in how a certain sound erm... sounds between low/normal/high settings!musikmachine wrote:Did you try the lower quality settings? They make a big difference.
So, if you think you've got a sound "right" when using ACE in the low setting, and then turn to "high" to render, it may not sound "right" any longer. Then what? Back to square "A".
Just saying.
If you want to use the high setting, then tweak the sound on the high setting, then you can record midi at a lower setting and render at high...
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- Banned
- 159 posts since 19 Oct, 2010
pdxindy wrote:If you got a sound right on a lower quality setting, then just use the lower setting...
If you want to use the high setting, then tweak the sound on the high setting, then you can record midi at a lower setting and render at high...
Oh well, not my problem really.
- u-he
- 30217 posts since 8 Aug, 2002 from Berlin
Sorry, no... the wave display runs in a low priority thread. It only updates when your cpu core has time for it.osiris wrote:Love the sound, but sometimes 60 percent CPU on my Pentium dual core with 3 Gb Ram. - Yikes!
I'm wondering about the wave display window, Urs. Would it make any difference if that could be turned off?
Just a thought.
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- Banned
- 2623 posts since 20 Feb, 2004 from in ur head pullin cablez out [boston, ma]
95% of my work with Ace in the pads and textures department is done on draft or standard setting, and they sound (IMO obviously) ridiculously good. I see aboslutely no need to push it when it's not necessary. The biggest difference in sound that I can audibly hear most of the time is from draft mode to standard mode. Obviously it depends on the type of sound you're creating, but out of 230+ patches in the latest bank I worked on you won't find anything but maybe half a dozen or so on good or accurate mode. And yes, I do look to see if there is a severe sound quality difference, and I do so primarily by composing an entire track in draft or standard, and then flip them all to accurate or good and render various versions of both. For me, and for a major portion of the audio industry I presume, the final outcome is what matters most.
- KVRAF
- 26978 posts since 3 Feb, 2005 from in the wilds
In some cases I like draft or standard better for a particular sound...rlahalla wrote:95% of my work with Ace in the pads and textures department is done on draft or standard setting, and they sound (IMO obviously) ridiculously good. I see aboslutely no need to push it when it's not necessary. The biggest difference in sound that I can audibly hear most of the time is from draft mode to standard mode. Obviously it depends on the type of sound you're creating, but out of 230+ patches in the latest bank I worked on you won't find anything but maybe half a dozen or so on good or accurate mode. And yes, I do look to see if there is a severe sound quality difference, and I do so primarily by composing an entire track in draft or standard, and then flip them all to accurate or good and render various versions of both. For me, and for a major portion of the audio industry I presume, the final outcome is what matters most.
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- KVRAF
- 2628 posts since 30 Mar, 2007 from In and Out Burger
same herepdxindy wrote:
In some cases I like draft or standard better for a particular sound...
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- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 14240 posts since 20 Nov, 2003 from Lost and Spaced
I must have overlooked the sound quality setting. What is the default? I do know there was an issue with 'ghosting' of the cables. I do like that you can choose the size. Brilliant! Something every software developer should implement if they can.
- Banned
- 6129 posts since 9 Oct, 2007 from an inharmonious society
The selector is in the top left section.osiris wrote:I must have overlooked the sound quality setting. What is the default?
I believe the default is standard, but can't remember atm.
- u-he
- 30217 posts since 8 Aug, 2002 from Berlin
Accurate is default... The demo is playing with open cardsmcnoone wrote:The selector is in the top left section.osiris wrote:I must have overlooked the sound quality setting. What is the default?
I believe the default is standard, but can't remember atm.
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- KVRAF
- 10815 posts since 26 Nov, 2004 from UK
Fact!!pdxindy wrote:
In some cases I like draft or standard better for a particular sound...
(1x oversampling, 44.1, Draft ect... dose sound better for some sounds!!!)
this sadly gets overlooked in the sound quality wars!!
i mean the so called "best" drum machines where no where near 32bit float!
these newer range of plugins where you can select this per instance/preset are great!!!
Subz
