Hmm, so you play it on an i7 and think it's unusable? Strange, i am using a 4,5 years old Core 2 Quad Q6600 and while i still got problems using Diva in "Divine" mode (=highest quality) with polyphonic sounds (Divine works well for monophonic sounds) i have much less problems when using "Great" or "Fsst" quality/accuracy.PraxisCat wrote:I like it but I am not sure I find it usable because of the resource usage. I can pull off the same sounds in other software products without the CPU hit. Note I am running on an i7 sandy bridge, my system is no slouch. While Diva is an accurate emulation of classic systems, in fact frequently dead on, that is not always what I am looking for. The thing is the CPU usage makes it a bit unusable to me. I guess this is the only real critique one can offer. Its a great vst, that will only get better with time. But right now it is a little too ahead of its time and it eats into too much CPU. By the time I replace my computer though it will be perfect.
If we speak about multiple instances at the same time there could be a problem indeed.
On your system the performance should be better IMO, especially as the new "Multithread" mode seems to be optimized for the i5 and i7.
On the other hand i am currently also working with Saurus and while it may or may not have the sound quality of Diva the much lower CPU use (even with Unison used) is a big advantage at least if you have an older CPU like i have.
Like you already mentioned the CPU use (which was a bit improved now) of Diva is the only real bad thing i found about it. Anyway it would be nice if Urs could add an Arpeggiator and/or Step Sequencer in a future version. Of course i could use e.g. the Arp in Ableton Live and the WOK Clockwork Step Sequencer but an internal one would be really nice.
I just found that those are exactly the two points described in the "Cons" part of the Keyboard magazine review and in the Conclusion:
http://www.kvraudio.com/forum/viewtopic ... sc&start=0
Ingo
