Urs wrote: it's a matter of five days to create an algorithm thats suspiciously similar sounding.
That was goldAnX wrote:Maybe take 10 days, and make it sound identical?
Urs wrote: it's a matter of five days to create an algorithm thats suspiciously similar sounding.
That was goldAnX wrote:Maybe take 10 days, and make it sound identical?
Totally agree. And not only the amount of soft synths have increased, also their quality have raised exponentially. We now have free softsynths that rival or even overpass the vast majority of commercial softsynths available five or six years ago. And the power of desktop computers double every five years, so, what was the most demanding synth when it appeared (DIVA) can run comfortably in any current good desktop unit, and will a light feather in terms of CPU consumption in 10 years.chk071 wrote:Interesting. I thought emulations were born out of the fact that you have many advantageous when making stuff digital, so that unstable oscillators, monophony, unreliable technics, being able to only use one instance and all that could be ruled out, and combined with the ability to add lots of stuff which would cost a fortune if you would put it in the real thing. And those days are long gone? Interesting too, because over the years, i felt like the amount of soft synths actually increased, not decreased..jon wrote: Emulations were born in a time when real analog synths were rare and expensive, unobtanium for most people, and those who had them cursed at the decades old tech. Those days are long gone.
Not anymore. Moore's law capped out on us.fmr wrote:And the power of desktop computers double every five years.
Just like I said, "cursed the decades old tech". Those days are gone.chk071 wrote:Interesting. I thought emulations were born out of the fact that you have many advantageous when making stuff digital, so that unstable oscillators, monophony, unreliable technics, being able to only use one instance and all that could be ruled out, and combined with the ability to add lots of stuff which would cost a fortune if you would put it in the real thing. And those days are long gone? Interesting too, because over the years, i felt like the amount of soft synths actually increased, not decreased..jon wrote: Emulations were born in a time when real analog synths were rare and expensive, unobtanium for most people, and those who had them cursed at the decades old tech. Those days are long gone.
You've completely missed the context of that post mate..jon wrote:nevernamed wrote:What makes a convincing emulation is precisely the thing to focus on.![]()
Emulations were born in a time when real analog synths were rare and expensive, unobtanium for most people, and those who had them cursed at the decades old tech. Those days are long gone. I can walk into a mainstream consumer electronic retail store and buy a new Moog, Arp or Prophet. Or I can order modules to build a custom synth with parts from Roland, Moog, Waldorf and DSI plus a ton of more innovative designs. These cost more than a plugin, but aren't worthless in 10 years, and are way more inspiring on top of sounding better.
Now what if all those man-years of trying to create passable approximations of how old circuits sound would have been spent on researching PM? UX and UI design to better access additive synthesis? Exploring granular synthesis? What else is out there? Will we ever get to know, if all the effort is spent on reselling the same old "realistic vintage analog emulation!!111" over and over again?
What I mean is that if we accept that subtractive is the shit and bees knees of all synthesis, then it was already done well 50 years ago, and doing a passable emulation of it on the PC isn't going forwards, it's going backwards while never reaching the goal.
Here let me help you:kmonkey wrote:One need to be complete idiot to believe that Bricasti reverb and processing inside (as much as good it is and no doubt it is good) is 30 times more powerful then Intel i7.
That is like complete nonsense. Yeah i know someone will jump with "under special case" stupidity and all that...
That is complete bu****** reserved for (i guess) their users.
If anything is even remotely true about that, even it is 5% true then i can safely know that if he need power of 30 i7 to generate reverb sound then he is very bad DSP developer...that's for sure.
Well going just purely by numbers, we aren't doubling GHz since 5 years ago. We cannot expect 10 GHz CPUs in 5 years time. What we can expect is more cores, but not more GHz, and smaller TDP - but that doesn't really impact performance much, since applications need to be coded to take advantage of multiple cores, however the majority of applications still don't know what multiple cores even mean...fmr wrote:How so?EvilDragon wrote:Not anymore. Moore's law capped out on us.fmr wrote:And the power of desktop computers double every five years.
Where is the "30 times more powerful than Intel i7" coming from?kmonkey wrote:One need to be complete idiot to believe that Bricasti reverb and processing inside (as much as good it is and no doubt it is good) is 30 times more powerful then Intel i7.
5 years from now we might already have the first quantum computersEvilDragon wrote:Well going just purely by numbers, we aren't doubling GHz since 5 years ago. We cannot expect 10 GHz CPUs in 5 years time. What we can expect is more cores, but not more GHz, and smaller TDP - but that doesn't really impact performance much, since applications need to be coded to take advantage of multiple cores, however the majority of applications still don't know what multiple cores even mean...fmr wrote:How so?EvilDragon wrote:Not anymore. Moore's law capped out on us.fmr wrote:And the power of desktop computers double every five years.
Yes, we are now following a different path, with more cores, instead of faster clocks, but judging in terms of benchmarks, we are there. Raw power exists, it's just a matter of coders adapting to the new reality.EvilDragon wrote:Well going just purely by numbers, we aren't doubling GHz since 5 years ago. We cannot expect 10 GHz CPUs in 5 years time. What we can expect is more cores, but not more GHz, and smaller TDP - but that doesn't really impact performance much, since applications need to be coded to take advantage of multiple cores, however the majority of applications still don't know what multiple cores even mean...fmr wrote:How so?EvilDragon wrote:Not anymore. Moore's law capped out on us.fmr wrote:And the power of desktop computers double every five years.
I don't think so. We'll need longer for that, that area is still in its fetal segment IMHO. Perhaps 20 years...fluffy_little_something wrote:5 years from now we might already have the first quantum computers
It's funny, because i already heard/read the same 15 years ago.fluffy_little_something wrote:5 years from now we might already have the first quantum computersEvilDragon wrote:Well going just purely by numbers, we aren't doubling GHz since 5 years ago. We cannot expect 10 GHz CPUs in 5 years time. What we can expect is more cores, but not more GHz, and smaller TDP - but that doesn't really impact performance much, since applications need to be coded to take advantage of multiple cores, however the majority of applications still don't know what multiple cores even mean...fmr wrote:How so?EvilDragon wrote:Not anymore. Moore's law capped out on us.fmr wrote:And the power of desktop computers double every five years.
But not from mechk071 wrote:It's funny, because i already heard/read the same 15 years ago.
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