For that subjective dislike to elicit the kind of anger and bitterness so evident in your posts is just plain odd.
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I'd agree with that too. It's NOT only sampling that causes the sound to be different. Otherwise, an analog song writen to CD (which usually uses 44Khz sampling rate) would sound much worse than the real. Do you ever realize a difference? I don't. In theory (Nyquist-Shannon), 2x over sampling is sufficient to reconstruct an original signal (while x is the highest frequency in the original signal).Aroused by JarJar wrote:An analog synthesizer recorded to digital on anything but the most crap equipment still sounds like an analog synthesizer. Obviously higher sampling and bit rates, and better ADDA filtering are going to capture more of the signal, but it is clearly not sampling limitations which are the cause of things sounding "not analog". If sampling limitations were at fault, it would not be possible to capture analog sound in recordings. Sure an analog synthesizer sounds better in real life, what doesn't? But the great bulk of distinguishing characteristics survives even 16/44.1 recording/playback and digital processing.goldenanalog wrote:Thanks for taking the time to respond, hakey!hakey wrote:1. Information is physical stuff, so the quantity of information in any analog signal over a fixed time can not be infinite (that would break the first law of thermodynamics).goldenanalog wrote:Back OT (DIVA vs. Analog):
Quantity of information:
44,100/48,000/96,000 points vs: INF (continuous; no reconstruction filter used or required-no breakdown of the wave-shape at the boundaries)
2. After DA conversion the resultant signal is analog anyway, so has the exact same quality of continuity.
3. Not sure what any of this has to do with the relative merits of either as musical instruments.
3.) This is really just a coarse comparison between 2 different methods of synthesis, and the possible reasons why they inherently sound different.
1.) No matter how small of a window of time that you use to measure an analog signal, there will be a rate of change associated with that period of time-even when your time measurement window is infinitely small (in theory, at least-I recognize that there are limits in a physical system)
Immediately after conversion back to analog, the reconstructed waveform looks like a series of discrete values due to sample/hold circuitry 'freezing' the last given value. Rate of change *inside* a sample period is fixed: zero. *Between* sample periods: asymptotic.
2.) Reconstruction filters are imperfect; therefore, there is distortion introduced when a wave is 'reconstructed'. This is readily apparent at the boundary-if you were to attempt to reproduce an 10khz analog wave (any shape)using 44.1khz as the sampling frequency, the reconstructed waveform would probably not look like the original.
Sheeesh, and I thought it was still about that stupid joke I made in the smart aliasing thread.Shy wrote:hakey: I'm just bitter about what I believe is low expectations by people.
Urs: what the hell are you talking about? Not liking your synth is personal now? For the record, I dislike almost all "virtual analog" synths, you can relax. (Hint: I wouldn't have sold the NL2X if I really liked it)
What low expectations?Shy wrote:hakey: I'm just bitter about what I believe is low expectations by people.
Well, it may not be personal but if you keep ranting about it long afterwards it can very well be seen as that.Shy wrote:Urs: what the hell are you talking about? Not liking your synth is personal now? For the record, I dislike almost all "virtual analog" synths, you can relax. (Hint: I wouldn't have sold the NL2X if I really liked it)
@urs - at the risk of making what sounds like a feature request (and bringing ACE up again): Would it be possible at some point to incorporate something like ACE's mapping generator into Diva? That would provide for simulating round-robin. Not to feature-creap the instrument, but having it behind the hood like ACE would provide the option for dialing in some of that analog randomness.goldenanalog wrote:Thanks, Aroused by jarjar for your thoughts! If what you are saying is true, then the natural question is: Why doesn't digital sampling of notes across a given analog synth adding round-robin info; then playback of those samples solve the problem? And what about live situations for the performer? He or she knows when they are playing the real deal. Let's see where we are in a few years after other Dev's have started catching up to Urs, and Urs has pushed us further ahead.
Hmm, neutral - not really that bothered.Shy wrote:You really don't like people who disagree with your opinion, eh?
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