Confirmed, lightning bolts are sharp and jaggy.
If the electricity is not reasonable smooth inside your analog synths, I recommend that you buy better quality synths with diodes and capacitors in the circuit to smooth out the jagginess.
Confirmed, lightning bolts are sharp and jaggy.
Yes, everything you mention is hardware, but this thread is not about digital hardware, its about analog hardware versus software emulation copies.aanano wrote: Wed Jul 23, 2025 1:24 amAnd a computer is hardware. And so is a controller. And so is the interface. And so are the speakers.dellboy wrote: Wed Jul 16, 2025 11:20 amThe 1988 Korg M1 was hardware and software, and definitely not analog, digital all through, which is why the Software version can be identical. An analog synth uses smooth electrical voltage, and has to housed in a hardware box of some sort.aanano wrote: Tue Jul 15, 2025 9:00 pm Did the thread title change?
I thought it was software vs hardware. and I couldn't figure out how anyone has one without the other.
If the title changed - shouldn't it be analog hardware vs digital hardware? Software still needs hardware to run it.
This is the kind of thing people write when they have no idea how many electrical circuits operate or that 1/f noise exists – the kind of noise that is partly responsible for the qualitative difference between how an analogue circuit sounds and a digital emulation.dellboy wrote: Wed Jul 23, 2025 9:19 amConfirmed, lightning bolts are sharp and jaggy.
If the electricity is not reasonable smooth inside your analog synths, I recommend that you buy better quality synths with diodes and capacitors in the circuit to smooth out the jagginess.
My original post about "smooth" electricity should be read in context. I meant it is "relatively" smooth as opposed to the "steps" of digital synths. Your technical knowledge is way beyond my pay grade, but my understanding is that the rough electricity is progressively "smoothed" by various components as it travels around a circuit. The argument used today by software developers is that digital steps are now so fine that they are as smooth as analog electrical circuits, and this objection is now history.Gamma-UT wrote: Wed Jul 23, 2025 9:54 amThis is the kind of thing people write when they have no idea how many electrical circuits operate or that 1/f noise exists – the kind of noise that is partly responsible for the qualitative difference between how an analogue circuit sounds and a digital emulation.dellboy wrote: Wed Jul 23, 2025 9:19 amConfirmed, lightning bolts are sharp and jaggy.
If the electricity is not reasonable smooth inside your analog synths, I recommend that you buy better quality synths with diodes and capacitors in the circuit to smooth out the jagginess.
You only think it's "smooth" because, at best, you've seen frequency domain plots that suggest it. Not the dynamic, time-domain behaviour. This is the kind of thing that happens if you don't carefully tune the parameters because the diodes in a ladder are switching between modes rapidly:
Let's face it, it's a diode. This is not something designed for a smooth, linear response and at its heart relies on discretised quantum-mechanical effects. 1/f noise is fundamentally a QM effect as well.
That is partly why modelling in software is so tricky. Everything converges, until it doesn't, which you have to account for.
But it has sod all with being "smooth". That often only happens once you pop an inductor or two in the way to even things out a bit.
No digital synth or computer ever generated "steps" at its output: at least not in the way you imply. They all had, and still have, analogue output stages that are designed with an understanding of to limit the maximum frequency of any reasonable output waveform to less than the Nyquist limit.dellboy wrote: Wed Jul 23, 2025 10:29 am My original post about "smooth" electricity should be read in context. I meant it is "relatively" smooth as opposed to the "steps" of digital synths. Your technical knowledge is way beyond my pay grade, but my understanding is that the rough electricity is progressively "smoothed" by various components as it travels around a circuit. The argument used today by software developers is that digital steps are now so fine that they are as smooth as analog electrical circuits, and this objection is now history.
Sorry, I am lost, I genuinely do not know if you are arguing for or against analog or software?Gamma-UT wrote: Wed Jul 23, 2025 10:51 amNo digital synth or computer ever generated "steps" at its output: at least not in the way you imply. They all had, and still have, analogue output stages that are designed with an understanding of to limit the maximum frequency of any reasonable output waveform to less than the Nyquist limit.dellboy wrote: Wed Jul 23, 2025 10:29 am My original post about "smooth" electricity should be read in context. I meant it is "relatively" smooth as opposed to the "steps" of digital synths. Your technical knowledge is way beyond my pay grade, but my understanding is that the rough electricity is progressively "smoothed" by various components as it travels around a circuit. The argument used today by software developers is that digital steps are now so fine that they are as smooth as analog electrical circuits, and this objection is now history.
I think he's arguing for facts.dellboy wrote: Wed Jul 23, 2025 10:57 am Sorry, I am lost, I genuinely do not know if you are arguing for or against analog or software?
It's two trains passing in the night. You are repeating common misinformation that people use to argue that digital is bad when, in reality, it's not only incorrect, it's a meaningless argument, and Gamma is taking you a notch too seriously trying to explain the reconstruction filter.dellboy wrote: Wed Jul 23, 2025 10:57 amSorry, I am lost, I genuinely do not know if you are arguing for or against analog or software?Gamma-UT wrote: Wed Jul 23, 2025 10:51 amNo digital synth or computer ever generated "steps" at its output: at least not in the way you imply. They all had, and still have, analogue output stages that are designed with an understanding of to limit the maximum frequency of any reasonable output waveform to less than the Nyquist limit.dellboy wrote: Wed Jul 23, 2025 10:29 am My original post about "smooth" electricity should be read in context. I meant it is "relatively" smooth as opposed to the "steps" of digital synths. Your technical knowledge is way beyond my pay grade, but my understanding is that the rough electricity is progressively "smoothed" by various components as it travels around a circuit. The argument used today by software developers is that digital steps are now so fine that they are as smooth as analog electrical circuits, and this objection is now history.
I see the root of the problem here.dellboy wrote: Wed Jul 23, 2025 10:57 am Sorry, I am lost, I genuinely do not know if you are arguing for or against analog or software?
Who said that? Not me. I have never posted anything about "steps" at output.Gamma-UT wrote: Wed Jul 23, 2025 10:51 am
No digital synth or computer ever generated "steps" at its output:
If that’s the case, why are you so obsessed with smoothness as being the key differentiator? You can’t have it both ways.
LOL! "obsessed with smoothness"!Gamma-UT wrote: Wed Jul 23, 2025 12:26 pmIf that’s the case, why are you so obsessed with smoothness as being the key differentiator? You can’t have it both ways.
And yet, here you are.dellboy wrote: Wed Jul 23, 2025 1:07 pm LOL! "obsessed with smoothness"!
Is that how I come across here?![]()
Life is too short to be "obsessed with smoothness"!![]()
Yep, sitting here with my digital Kurzweil K2700 as a controller for my laptop with VSTs on it. A pair of Presonus monitors and a USB audio interface and headphones. My current setup. No "smooth" analog stuff at all. Completely in the box.
I don't think I'd quite be as strident about boasting about how anything explained to you goes, figuratively, in one ear and out the other utterly unimpeded.dellboy wrote: Wed Jul 23, 2025 2:03 pmYep, sitting here with my digital Kurzweil K2700 as a controller for my laptop with VSTs on it. A pair of Presonus monitors and a USB audio interface and headphones. My current setup. No "smooth" analog stuff at all. Completely in the box.
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