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Galbanum wrote: Version 1.0.2
Date: 03/01/2015
Next up 1.1.0 with some new features!
More than a year since the last update... :?
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Just spent some time with Kaleidoscope and Simons set number 07. I spent time reading the manual in more depth, I wish I had done this before..So now I know enough to begin making more conscious musical choices when I'm working with it.

https://soundcloud.com/twotoneshuzz/surfacingcalls
waves break, but somehow it all makes sense.

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Valery_Kondakoff wrote:
Galbanum wrote: Version 1.0.2
Date: 03/01/2015
Next up 1.1.0 with some new features!
More than a year since the last update... :?
i've put it aside until the next update comes. haven't opened it since the last EP i made back in september.

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working away... great things take time. sometimes much more than we estimate or would like...

but I assure you we're not sitting idle. we've been working our butts off... :tu:

(6am Saturday morning for me local time, and I'm now starting my day and plan to work at least 10 hours today, as an example...)
Last edited by Andrew Souter on Sat Mar 05, 2016 4:58 am, edited 1 time in total.

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Galbanum wrote:working away... great things take time. sometimes much more than we estimate or would like...

but I assure you we're not sitting idle. we've been working our butts off... :tu:
looking forward to the update.

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TwoToneshuzz wrote:Just spent some time with Kaleidoscope and Simons set number 07. I spent time reading the manual in more depth, I wish I had done this before..So now I know enough to begin making more conscious musical choices when I'm working with it.

https://soundcloud.com/twotoneshuzz/surfacingcalls

Listening to it now, sounds great on my studio speakers, lovely textures, very delicate!

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Galbanum wrote:working away... great things take time. sometimes much more than we estimate or would like...

but I assure you we're not sitting idle. we've been working our butts off... :tu:

(6am Saturday morning for me local time, and I'm now starting my day and plan to work at least 10 hours today, as an example...)
...but you know a day has 24 hours...... :D

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Sampleconstruct wrote:
TwoToneshuzz wrote:Just spent some time with Kaleidoscope and Simons set number 07. I spent time reading the manual in more depth, I wish I had done this before..So now I know enough to begin making more conscious musical choices when I'm working with it.

https://soundcloud.com/twotoneshuzz/surfacingcalls

Listening to it now, sounds great on my studio speakers, lovely textures, very delicate!

Thanks Simon, I took the day off from everything else to get into the Kaleidoscope and your resources for it. I happy I did as I've gained a new understanding of how to use it and further develop your resources for it. Especially in this last track I experimented with various alternative tunings, and impuls files. I now understand that the Kaleidoscope is an instrument. One that can be mastered with effort, but very important to RTFM, and experiment...Oh Time Usage, can be a little high, but when you get access to something that can make such a unique sounding piece, and not just the same old same old, then it's worth it!
waves break, but somehow it all makes sense.

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TwoToneshuzz wrote:
Sampleconstruct wrote:
TwoToneshuzz wrote:Just spent some time with Kaleidoscope and Simons set number 07. I spent time reading the manual in more depth, I wish I had done this before..So now I know enough to begin making more conscious musical choices when I'm working with it.

https://soundcloud.com/twotoneshuzz/surfacingcalls

Listening to it now, sounds great on my studio speakers, lovely textures, very delicate!

Thanks Simon, I took the day off from everything else to get into the Kaleidoscope and your resources for it. I happy I did as I've gained a new understanding of how to use it and further develop your resources for it. Especially in this last track I experimented with various alternative tunings, and impuls files. I now understand that the Kaleidoscope is an instrument. One that can be mastered with effort, but very important to RTFM, and experiment...Oh Time Usage, can be a little high, but when you get access to something that can make such a unique sounding piece, and not just the same old same old, then it's worth it!
I know the Kaleidoscope time tunnel too well myself, I don't know how many weeks I spent with it (adding up the total hours), but often enough when making new presets I begin and 3-4 hours later I return to the Berlin time zone, wondering where time has gone...it was like that from the beginning of KS and i'm happy it's still like that, even after a year without an update - we have what we have.

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Sampleconstruct wrote:
TwoToneshuzz wrote:
Sampleconstruct wrote:
TwoToneshuzz wrote:Just spent some time with Kaleidoscope and Simons set number 07. I spent time reading the manual in more depth, I wish I had done this before..So now I know enough to begin making more conscious musical choices when I'm working with it.

https://soundcloud.com/twotoneshuzz/surfacingcalls

Listening to it now, sounds great on my studio speakers, lovely textures, very delicate!

Thanks Simon, I took the day off from everything else to get into the Kaleidoscope and your resources for it. I happy I did as I've gained a new understanding of how to use it and further develop your resources for it. Especially in this last track I experimented with various alternative tunings, and impuls files. I now understand that the Kaleidoscope is an instrument. One that can be mastered with effort, but very important to RTFM, and experiment...Oh Time Usage, can be a little high, but when you get access to something that can make such a unique sounding piece, and not just the same old same old, then it's worth it!
I know the Kaleidoscope time tunnel too well myself, I don't know how many weeks I spent with it (adding up the total hours), but often enough when making new presets I begin and 3-4 hours later I return to the Berlin time zone, wondering where time has gone...it was like that from the beginning of KS and i'm happy it's still like that, even after a year without an update - we have what we have.
I'm not worried about any update either, I'm getting things to work with my 2011 iMac i5 3.1 Ghz..

Just today for example well actually yesterday and today I made this track, using Kaleidoscope resources from your set 07 mostly the Mandala with the Dorje Bell tuning.

https://soundcloud.com/twotoneshuzz/thebroadview
waves break, but somehow it all makes sense.

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Can't wait until we all have one of these, so we can stop worrying about micro-optimizations!

http://news.slashdot.org/story/16/03/06 ... n-obsolete

Scary wonderful stuff is coming in technology these days... :tu:

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quantum computing will only contribute to the centralisation of computing IMO ... we'll have dumb terminals at home, and 'subscribe' to computational power... as individuals we'll never have way more computational power than we need, at home. not as long as we're living in a pre-dominately capitalist world.

ymmv

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Daags wrote:quantum computing will only contribute to the centralisation of computing IMO ... we'll have dumb terminals at home, and 'subscribe' to computational power... as individuals we'll never have way more computational power than we need, at home. not as long as we're living in a pre-dominately capitalist world.

ymmv
This isn't really to the advantage of computing manufacturers, in a capitalist world.
Also notice the fast emergence of swiftly developing powerful DIY options such as Raspberry Pi, Beagle board and home brew stuff such as the audio/midi orietated Patchblocks and Axoloti.

I wonder how long before 3D printing hits the IC world

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VariKusBrainZ wrote:
Daags wrote:quantum computing will only contribute to the centralisation of computing IMO ... we'll have dumb terminals at home, and 'subscribe' to computational power... as individuals we'll never have way more computational power than we need, at home. not as long as we're living in a pre-dominately capitalist world.

ymmv
This isn't really to the advantage of computing manufacturers, in a capitalist world.
it is to the advantage of service providers though, with much less overhead (long term) - subscription models are a capitalist wet dream especially for essential services or services that border on essential (i.e internet, or as I speculate - computational power in a world of quantum & centralised commputing). and computer manufacturing is simply replaced with terminal manufacturing. double win.

mark my words, the end goal is centralised computational power - and quantum computing can make that happen.

ymmv. god bless america.

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Daags wrote:
VariKusBrainZ wrote:
Daags wrote:quantum computing will only contribute to the centralisation of computing IMO ... we'll have dumb terminals at home, and 'subscribe' to computational power... as individuals we'll never have way more computational power than we need, at home. not as long as we're living in a pre-dominately capitalist world.

ymmv
This isn't really to the advantage of computing manufacturers, in a capitalist world.
it is to the advantage of service providers though, with much less overhead (long term) - subscription models are a capitalist wet dream especially for essential services or services that border on essential (i.e internet, or as I speculate - computational power in a world of quantum & centralised commputing). and computer manufacturing is simply replaced with terminal manufacturing. double win.

mark my words, the end goal is centralised computational power - and quantum computing can make that happen.

ymmv. god bless america.
I do agree to an extent just not the total dominance youre predicting.
But I guess youre only thinking about 'desktop' computing.

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