bug requests. not but requests.
sorry about that,
Dave
at the shop they write either 99 Euros or 119$, same if you proceed to Share-it. The price in GBP is 88,30.LeVzi wrote:
Its £139 to me, which is $225
My bad though, Saurus is $142 not $119 (£88 )
Hi Dave,dathyr1 wrote:Question for anyone using the Saurus. I am using the demo at this time.
I sent in two requests to Tone2, but no responces on this topic.
thanks for any info on this,
Dave
Sort of hate to mention thisolikana wrote: i'm not aware of any other softsynths with 0 delay feedback filters apart from Diva and Saurus.
that part is correct....linearity is a polynomial of order up to 1...above 1 for instance x squared is a non linear system......Non-linearity is by definition not polynomial, so approximations need to be used, although often this isn't too onerous.
Ahh, this is a bit nuanced - Linear here isn't on numeric basis, but I think it's valid to say on basis of number of operations required to compute on a microprocessor. Eg - a trig function isn't exactly computable but approximations up to desired accuracy are, and some logic can construct piece-wise compositions thereof, this sort of mathzvenx wrote:I don't think :that part is correct....linearity is a polynomial of order up to 1...above 1 for instance x squared is a non linear system......Non-linearity is by definition not polynomial, so approximations need to be used, although often this isn't too onerous.
There's exceptionally tricky behavior with multiple components, each with nonlinear features, and with feedback from the output back into the original input, and calculated at 0-delay. This is a lot of conditions but meeting them leads to impressive results. Analytically the domain isn't simply the input signal anymore, or the 1-delay case of the input plus the previous output, but input plus something essentially functional. So mathematically the challenge is due to feedback behavior with nonlinear components, but there are less challenging / less computationally intensive ways of doing things where nonlinearity is not so integrated with feedback.hakey wrote:I thought the nonlinearity with filters was due to feedback behaviour.
As in....?GeorgeZ wrote:I beg to differxamido wrote:I use it all the time now. I like it. The sound is not like diva, but it's a very efficient synth. Fun to program for sound that musically works. Not for hardcore sound designer though.
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