Yes, the beta is over. It expired 8/31. My condolences.The Mymble wrote:Hi
Just installed the new build for Bazille; are the new serials available or has beta closed now? I will of course be buying this in a week or so but a week with no modular goodness.....?
Latest Builds in August: 2570
- KVRAF
- 4141 posts since 11 Aug, 2006 from Texas
- KVRist
- 183 posts since 14 May, 2014 from Berlin | Germany
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- KVRAF
- 9521 posts since 6 Oct, 2004
I would assume the prominet comparisons would beabique wrote: I had the feeling that the native Linux version was faster than the windows version under wine (through vst-bridge). Yet I haven't done accurate benchmark.
linux with 32bit reaper running U-he plugins using wine
Vs
linux with 64bit bitwig running U-he plugins natively.
Vs
Windows 64bit reaper running U-he plugins natively
Vs
0Sex with 64bit reaper running U-he plugins natively.
Vs
0Sex with Logic running U-he plugins natively
Will be good to be seeing Zebra stripes soon!
Cheers
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- KVRist
- 292 posts since 25 Jun, 2012 from Earth
Another big big thumbs-up here for getting everything U-he on linux!!
brian
brian
Tired of Windows? Linux offers hundreds of good distros. For more info:
DistroWatch
Some good synths for linux: www.linuxsynths.com
DistroWatch
Some good synths for linux: www.linuxsynths.com
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- KVRAF
- 9521 posts since 6 Oct, 2004
There is a randomizer script at u-he,
http://www.u-he.com/PatchLib/all.html
you place it in a folder of presets, load a preset, then load the randomizer preset,
if you like what it produces, or your followup moodifications,
give it a name and save it.
It's not complex to edit the script.
In a large folder of presets, you can rename copies of it to appear
in the middle, top, and bottom of a folder, to reduce scrolling to find it.
You can control the percentage of randomness, to keep the changes
closer to a sound you like, and study the changes, and learn as you go.
Or maximize it for less predictable results.
(I wonder if a coder could modify this for use in amsynth?)
Cheers
http://www.u-he.com/PatchLib/all.html
you place it in a folder of presets, load a preset, then load the randomizer preset,
if you like what it produces, or your followup moodifications,
give it a name and save it.
It's not complex to edit the script.
In a large folder of presets, you can rename copies of it to appear
in the middle, top, and bottom of a folder, to reduce scrolling to find it.
You can control the percentage of randomness, to keep the changes
closer to a sound you like, and study the changes, and learn as you go.
Or maximize it for less predictable results.
(I wonder if a coder could modify this for use in amsynth?)
Cheers
-
- KVRist
- 292 posts since 25 Jun, 2012 from Earth
COOL! I'll have to try this out. Kind of like digging for gold--may take time, but definitely worth it!glokraw wrote:There is a randomizer script at u-he,
http://www.u-he.com/PatchLib/all.html
you place it in a folder of presets, load a preset, then load the randomizer preset,
if you like what it produces, or your followup moodifications,
give it a name and save it.
It's not complex to edit the script.
In a large folder of presets, you can rename copies of it to appear
in the middle, top, and bottom of a folder, to reduce scrolling to find it.
You can control the percentage of randomness, to keep the changes
closer to a sound you like, and study the changes, and learn as you go.
Or maximize it for less predictable results.
(I wonder if a coder could modify this for use in amsynth?)
Cheers
(amsynth has randomizing capability: ctrl+r However, it randomizing all parameters, excepting for volume, I think..)
Carla also has a randomize function now too, so if you have the KXStudio packages installed, when you open an app in Carla, you'll find a randomize button. Definitely a powerful tool..
brian
Tired of Windows? Linux offers hundreds of good distros. For more info:
DistroWatch
Some good synths for linux: www.linuxsynths.com
DistroWatch
Some good synths for linux: www.linuxsynths.com
