You were implying DSI which absolutely wasn't the case with Pro-53 discontinuation etc. It had nothing to do with happenings in hardware synth world at the time.
NI Pro 54?
- KVRAF
- 24403 posts since 7 Jan, 2009 from Croatia
Absynth came from a different codebase courtesy of Brian Clevinger and he was adamant about keeping it updated with new features and stuff. So that's why it stayed 
You were implying DSI which absolutely wasn't the case with Pro-53 discontinuation etc. It had nothing to do with happenings in hardware synth world at the time.
You were implying DSI which absolutely wasn't the case with Pro-53 discontinuation etc. It had nothing to do with happenings in hardware synth world at the time.
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- KVRian
- 1185 posts since 27 Apr, 2016
I know 53 is old but I like it. It can sound a little weedy/thin but you can beef it up. 54 would need to be V good. I suspect Repro will cover some of the ground that any 54 might. Different synth than the Pro one of course but I look forwards to u-He Repro. I hope it is not too expensive and maybe a sweetener for existing customers ?
- KVRAF
- 24403 posts since 7 Jan, 2009 from Croatia
SCI Pro-One sounds quite different to Prophet-5, though, so I don't expect RePro-1 to cover nearly the same territory that Pro-53 used to. It'll be monophonic, for starters. 
- KVRAF
- 25849 posts since 20 Jan, 2008 from a star near where you are
I get your point, but I am not convinced. Did you you work at NI at the time, or who told you this?EvilDragon wrote:Absynth came from a different codebase courtesy of Brian Clevinger and he was adamant about keeping it updated with new features and stuff. So that's why it stayed
You were implying DSI which absolutely wasn't the case with Pro-53 discontinuation etc. It had nothing to do with happenings in hardware synth world at the time.
I am reading the details, but nothing convincing is mentioned there?
https://www.native-instruments.com/foru ... ils.92748/
Focus on Guitar Rig ?The resources that we save on legacy instruments like B4 II and Pro-53 will now be utilized for more popular and versatile products like Kontakt, Guitar Rig etc.
BTW: Who was the programmer/coders behind The Pro 5 series of NI?
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- KVRAF
- 1991 posts since 12 Mar, 2004
NI do not conventrate on anything, they are terrible hodge podge developers that need to get rid of some of the suits and hire more developers, look at the Maschine debacle, they ignore products right up to the point where customer complaints around the web are harming their sales, then they faux develop for a little while, then they discontinue.
In thd next few years NI will be nothing but
Reaktor
Kontakt
Guitar rig
Traktor
Maschine
And i suspect Maschine will be gone soon enough too
In thd next few years NI will be nothing but
Reaktor
Kontakt
Guitar rig
Traktor
Maschine
And i suspect Maschine will be gone soon enough too
Duh
- KVRAF
- 25849 posts since 20 Jan, 2008 from a star near where you are
Wow, that is some interesting info:
http://www.steinberg.net/en/products/vst/vst_story.html
So Pro-Five were more or less made by Steinberg ?The Pro-Five (later to become the Pro-52/Pro-53) developed by Native Instruments as the first third-party produced VST instrument was released at nearly the same time as Model-E.
Yvan: We had a very close relationship with Native Instruments at that time. They have become quite large now, but back then they were a small software developer company.
Matthias: While Pro-Five was certainly the first third-party produced VST instrument, we were very involved in the development.
http://www.steinberg.net/en/products/vst/vst_story.html
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Echoes in the Attic Echoes in the Attic https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=180417
- KVRAF
- 11994 posts since 12 May, 2008
None of their other standalone synths run on the Reaktor engine (obviously not including the Reaktor ensembles that are sold separately), though they were sometimes designed using Reaktor first. People often think this of Massive for example too.electro wrote:I always thought Pro 53 ran on the Reaktor engine, even though it was standalone.
- KVRAF
- 2275 posts since 4 Dec, 2011 from Brasília, Brazil
Yes, Massive is said to be prototyped on Reaktor.
http://www.soundonsound.com/music-busin ... nstruments
BTW, reading this interview/article/ad, it becomes really clear that somehow Reaktor was the core of what they wanted to do.
"We tried to come as close as possible to the prototypes in Reaktor in the C++ engine," Product Manager Frank Elting explains, "and we transferred all the oversampling things we did in Reaktor to the engine. If possible we wanted to get the Reaktor pure sound, without too many thoughts of CPU consumption."
http://www.soundonsound.com/music-busin ... nstruments
BTW, reading this interview/article/ad, it becomes really clear that somehow Reaktor was the core of what they wanted to do.
"We tried to come as close as possible to the prototypes in Reaktor in the C++ engine," Product Manager Frank Elting explains, "and we transferred all the oversampling things we did in Reaktor to the engine. If possible we wanted to get the Reaktor pure sound, without too many thoughts of CPU consumption."
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