Great idea-- like auto-freeze but transparently so.
Greg
Well that depends, if the chosen track was made of both a one whole audio track ( wavefile ) and wave files for each note, only the changed note requires a new wave file, the old section where the previous wave file was a part of the whole track file, just have to be deleted, and the overlapping notes recalculated, both where it was removed and where it would be placed anew. Can you follow me ? If effects was layered on top of the audio, they would just have to be recalculated to, for one 1 bar note that means max. 2 bars had to be changed. I know this would be difficult to program but not impossible though. It also would require some serious multitasking, but that is what vst is all about in the first place.if you cut and paste or otherwise move any clips, the 'background' .wav file would be useless and therefore deleted; however, since you're likely only working on one track at a time, the others would still be saving your CPU. Very Happy

http://gauss.ffii.org/PatentView/EP1072089birrbits wrote:if someone knows a faster way to apply the entire IR I'd love to hear it (besides time-traveling)
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