arrgh … new MacBookPro this might one of the only things I was depending on that might need Rosetta
Anybody know how that works or if there's an update?
thanks, Pete
AudioFuse native on M1 Pro?
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 237 posts since 5 Feb, 2006 from Toronto
UPDATE: I don't know if it's native but Audio Fuse works great on my new silicon mac m1 pro osx 13 mac book pro +plug and play seamless swapping back and forth to the Fireface 802 in main studio 12.5 ashtray pro zero problems
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VENTURA 13
- KVRian
- 949 posts since 25 Sep, 2014
If you're asking about the AudioFuse Control Center (the app that pops up when you press the button on the top left of the 'Fuse), it's not native yet. If you Get Info on the application from the Finder it says "Kind: Application (Intel)."
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 237 posts since 5 Feb, 2006 from Toronto
OK thanks for that — Audio Fuse runs for me without using AudioFuse Control Center ~ in Bitwig, LIVE and Logic… FWIW, I was able to launch AudioFuse Control Center in Ventura but I didn't do much of anything with it. I configure tracks in the DAW(s)
Does that mean the Control Center app ran on 'Rosetta' when launched? If so I believe it's the only thing on this new machine using it. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ Are we supposed to configure something or does Rosetta just run invisibly?
Does that mean the Control Center app ran on 'Rosetta' when launched? If so I believe it's the only thing on this new machine using it. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ Are we supposed to configure something or does Rosetta just run invisibly?
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- KVRian
- 949 posts since 25 Sep, 2014
It's totally invisible to you as a user.
In fact, from what I understand Intel apps don't run "in" Rosetta the way, say, an old Super Nintendo game runs in an emulator. Instead Rosetta translates the app from X86 instructions to ARM ahead of time (when you first launch it, or even when you install it) and runs that.
More info (ie the article I read) can be found here. I'm not a systems programmer but I do find this stuff oddly fascinating.
In fact, from what I understand Intel apps don't run "in" Rosetta the way, say, an old Super Nintendo game runs in an emulator. Instead Rosetta translates the app from X86 instructions to ARM ahead of time (when you first launch it, or even when you install it) and runs that.
More info (ie the article I read) can be found here. I'm not a systems programmer but I do find this stuff oddly fascinating.
