A new competitor to Uhe Diva has arived!!!
- u-he
- 30247 posts since 8 Aug, 2002 from Berlin
Hmmm, the purpose - if any - of this thread strikes me as odd, but if I see anything blatantly disrespectful against NI, I don't have the time to argue or edit. I just delete.
- KVRAF
- 6504 posts since 25 May, 2002 from Bobo-dioulasso\BF__Geneva/CH
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- KVRist
- 182 posts since 13 Nov, 2012 from Northern California
I've been reading this pile of opinions, arguments and overwrought teenage angst... and for my money, Monark kinda makes sense.
Diva is probably never going to be released in the Reaktor format... so NI figured they would make their own version JUST for Reaktor and pick up the few users U-he didn't feel like pursuing (for whatever reason). They might have reverse engineered Diva the day it came out and have been trying to figure out how they can use the results without U-he suing the PANTS off 'em.
It seems (by reading the brochure) to use the same predictive elements that Diva uses (though a much less robust feature set) and in essence, for Reaktor users, allows the same Moogy experience.
For my money, Diva seems to be nicer and somewhat more useful... more features/control, nicer looks, broader scope of potential users.
Can't we synthesists all just... get along together?
Diva is probably never going to be released in the Reaktor format... so NI figured they would make their own version JUST for Reaktor and pick up the few users U-he didn't feel like pursuing (for whatever reason). They might have reverse engineered Diva the day it came out and have been trying to figure out how they can use the results without U-he suing the PANTS off 'em.
It seems (by reading the brochure) to use the same predictive elements that Diva uses (though a much less robust feature set) and in essence, for Reaktor users, allows the same Moogy experience.
For my money, Diva seems to be nicer and somewhat more useful... more features/control, nicer looks, broader scope of potential users.
Can't we synthesists all just... get along together?
Retired, Bored and ready to WRECK the JOINT... gonna drop some OLD-STEP, ya'll!!
- KVRAF
- 3778 posts since 8 Dec, 2008 from Global Cowboy
Yesterday I was travelling from Dali to Kunming in SW China and I saw a HUGE billboard...
A baby boy was taking a long loopy piss into a shiny new toilet bowl..
There was only one word for the advertising on the billboard..
"MONARCH"
I did have a bit of a chuckle and I wished that my camera was ready to roll...
It was a classic
A baby boy was taking a long loopy piss into a shiny new toilet bowl..
There was only one word for the advertising on the billboard..
"MONARCH"
I did have a bit of a chuckle and I wished that my camera was ready to roll...
It was a classic
No auto tune...
- KVRian
- Topic Starter
- 694 posts since 8 Apr, 2012 from planet Earth
Lol, i think NI will be really pissed of if u would post it.digitalboytn wrote:Yesterday I was travelling from Dali to Kunming in SW China and I saw a HUGE billboard...
A baby boy was taking a long loopy piss into a shiny new toilet bowl..
There was only one word for the advertising on the billboard..
"MONARCH"
I did have a bit of a chuckle and I wished that my camera was ready to roll...
It was a classic
Do it!
- KVRian
- Topic Starter
- 694 posts since 8 Apr, 2012 from planet Earth
So NI hired Diva engenirs to creat something similar but for Reaktor to see what happend?TomTwohy wrote:I've been reading this pile of opinions, arguments and overwrought teenage angst... and for my money, Monark kinda makes sense.
Diva is probably never going to be released in the Reaktor format... so NI figured they would make their own version JUST for Reaktor and pick up the few users U-he didn't feel like pursuing (for whatever reason). They might have reverse engineered Diva the day it came out and have been trying to figure out how they can use the results without U-he suing the PANTS off 'em.
It seems (by reading the brochure) to use the same predictive elements that Diva uses (though a much less robust feature set) and in essence, for Reaktor users, allows the same Moogy experience.
For my money, Diva seems to be nicer and somewhat more useful... more features/control, nicer looks, broader scope of potential users.
Can't we synthesists all just... get along together?
Interesting
P.s. We need all Uhe synth in Reaktor
at list i need them all there.
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- Skunk Mod
- 21249 posts since 10 Jun, 2004 from Pony Pasture
Thanks for the deletion. Hakey was right, the poster whose post(s) you deleted was a returning troll, banned at least three times so far.Urs wrote:Hmmm, the purpose - if any - of this thread strikes me as odd, but if I see anything blatantly disrespectful against NI, I don't have the time to argue or edit. I just delete.
If you want to move the thread out to Instruments, where it wouldn't be so weirdly out of place, I wouldn't object. Or not, as you prefer; it makes no difference to me.
- u-he
- 30247 posts since 8 Aug, 2002 from Berlin
I highly doubt that. Their approach to zero delay feedback filters is based on Vadim's work, which IIRC is an analytical approach. If I'm not completely mistaken, his approach can make an accurate estimate of the output for any input and state, under the condition that there's a limit of non-linear elements - not sure if that's still the case, I think he also proposed Newton-Raphson refinements, which hints at something similar to our method.TomTwohy wrote:It seems (by reading the brochure) to use the same predictive elements that Diva uses
#---
Because this still comes up every now and then and because I believe that the majority of "Diva competitors" use CPU-friendly analytical approaches to model zero delay feedback filters:
No-one can accurately predict the filter output without delay if there is more than one non-linear element involved using analytical methods. It's either a wild guess in our books or just not distorted right. There's a great approach discussed here on KVR which mixes zero delay feedback for the linear filter but adds a unit delay to the difference of the distorted part of the signal. But that's not strictly zero delay feedback.
Diva otoh uses a numerical method, i.e. she uses a "good guess" and then iterates through the filter, improving the guess time by time, until the result is good enough. The advantage is, with the VCA model, the external input amp and the filter we have up to 7 non-linear elements and up to 8 filter poles per model. I doubt that anyone can do this in is an analytical way. I also doubt that anyone can do this sigificantly faster than we did. Our algorithm is really good and really fast. If someone is significantly faster he therefore must either use a less complex model, or a less accurate integration method (or less oversampling/more aliasing, naturally).
I usually suspect "less complex model" when people proclaim Diva-quality at much lower CPU impact. We have yet to hear a less complex model though that comes sufficiently close to our goals and ears.
I have a hunch that developers who start on a numerical approach quickly give up and go analytical. Because initially the numerical approach might not render in realtime. To those I say, it took us a few months to understand the behaviour of the analytical approach well enough to make it as fast as it is. Time well spent.
- Urs
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penguinfromdeep penguinfromdeep https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=193898
- KVRAF
- 1994 posts since 18 Nov, 2008
circuit modeling and 0-dfb filters are cool
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- KVRian
- 1200 posts since 16 May, 2007 from At home. Good bye city ways!
I don't understand all of this but my powers of deduction tell me you meant to say it took you months to understand the behavior of the numerical approach well enough?Urs wrote:
I have a hunch that developers who start on a numerical approach quickly give up and go analytical. Because initially the numerical approach might not render in realtime. To those I say, it took us a few months to understand the behaviour of the analytical approach well enough to make it as fast as it is. Time well spent.
- Urs
..off to play with my music toys - library music production.
http://www.FiveMinuteHippo.com
http://www.FiveMinuteHippo.com
- u-he
- 30247 posts since 8 Aug, 2002 from Berlin
Yes. The approach itself is fairly simple. Making it fast isn't.medienhexer wrote:I don't understand all of this but my powers of deduction tell me you meant to say it took you months to understand the behavior of the numerical approach well enough?Urs wrote:
I have a hunch that developers who start on a numerical approach quickly give up and go analytical. Because initially the numerical approach might not render in realtime. To those I say, it took us a few months to understand the behaviour of the analytical approach well enough to make it as fast as it is. Time well spent.
- Urs
- KVRAF
- 24455 posts since 7 Jan, 2009 from Croatia
I think that medienhexer wanted to point out you said "understand the behaviour of the analytical approach", where you talked about "numerical approach" for the whole time. 
- KVRAF
- 5234 posts since 25 Feb, 2008
Sounds like an example of computational irreducibility?Urs wrote:I also doubt that anyone can do this sigificantly faster than we did. Our algorithm is really good and really fast.
- KVRAF
- 37519 posts since 14 Sep, 2002 from In teh net
Anyway I have it - K9 package just arrived!!
- KVRAF
- 11386 posts since 3 Feb, 2003 from Finland, Espoo
@Urs: Because it's a reaktor ensemble you can just open it up and take a peak at how it's done. Perhaps there is something to learn? Or not. Never know. 
Cheers!
bManic
Cheers!
bManic
"Wisdom is wisdom, regardless of the idiot who said it." -an idiot
"They don't ban hate speech; they ban speech they hate." -an oracle
"They don't ban hate speech; they ban speech they hate." -an oracle
