Lol, I don't have to worry about all that. But you do have to remember Free software can also take time which is money. Especially if its buggy and causes sessions to crash. We pride ourselves on AmpliTube 3 FREE, its low CPU/Ram needs and of course the TONE.Hink wrote:free software is bad news, it cheats you of worrying about so many things you just do not get the entire experience. You don't have to ask your wife, you dont get buyer's remorse, you do not have to worry about protection schemes, you do not have to worry about selling it and you'll never regret not using it if you put it aside. Face it, free software is for the faint of heart...it's like skydiving with a huge safety net...where's the thrill?ObiK wrote:With good reason, AmpliTube 3 FREE offers a TON for free. Anyone wanting to dabble with recording guitar or bass can get by fine for free.Kontrast13 wrote:Seems like Amplitube Free is getting alot of attention, #1 on MusicRadar's Top 27 VSTs of 2012. I wonder what the poll values looked like
Also the AmpliTube manual is installed in the AmpliTube folder for any questions you may have. The question mark inside AmpliTube does direct you to the Custom Shop for online help. Though we will forward this to our development team to look at for future releases.
KVR has daylight? I thought this was the depths of the deep where the only light is from our computer screens!glokraw wrote:Gotta love that bio. You hide your secret personna well. At the day job,Peter - IK Multimedia wrote:True. From my sysadmin days, I know this exists even in corporate environments! I mean, I really don't like working with some flavors of Unix and I can even admit I truly hate a couple of them but I never understood raising it to the level of some religious war. For those that care, those two would be FreeBSD and AIX. Considering the superb process management of many Linux/Unix variant, I'd think the music world would have caught on. Having worked with embedded systems as well, I think there would be a great deal of value there too. Alas, the closest we get for music production is a GUI and some other niceties laid atop a BSD systemglokraw wrote:Now, imagine how many people would be running Linux if the variousPeter - IK Multimedia wrote: Imagine how many people would be running Linux if they believed every problem they've ever heard about Windows or OS X would happen to them.
distributions were managed like Operating Systems, rather than
competing cults.![]()
he sips corporate martinis, goes over some riffs, trades barbs at KVR,
but at night, he dons the cape and hood of Super Admin
descends deep into the server room, in a secret cavern beneath Monaco,
and rides herd on those evil Berlin hackers trying to crack the Custom Shop.
A tough job, but someone has to do it.
Obik! Another Martini, please, its almost daylight at KVR
