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Smenelian

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Posts posted by Smenelian

  1. I'm trying to decide if it's worth it to invest in one of these. Obviously the cost/gig factor is not very enticing but aside from that are there any other downsides? I've heard the drives encounter a performance hit during writing operations but that shouldn't affect loading programs and samples that have already been written. I'm considering installing Windows on the drive and some of my primary sample libraries. Thoughts?

  2. I see the velocity area underneath the piano roll - it looks pretty similar to FL but as I understand it I have to click on the velocity and then pull it down or up. I can't just click say 75% from the bottom of the pane and have it jump right to that spot. That's how FL does it and I know it sounds trivial but it is really weird and slow to not have that functionality.

    Anyway, I'll try not to keep the "DAW war" going and just ask: how can I have my 3 mouse tools stay the same when I open a project? I keep having to switch them back.

  3. Don't get the wrong idea. I'm not trying to trash Logic, I'm actually very interested in learning better ways to do things in the program. Just pointing out the differences I've seen that make an impact in my experience.

    In FL you don't have to actually drag the velocity, you just click where you want it to be and it pops into place. I guess that's the biggest difference there. Hitting esc is a good time saver that I was not aware of.

    Honestly if they did something like Sonar where you can customize what the mouse does down to the finest details, I would probably just switch to Logic altogether. I am a huge fan of the included plugins (Sculpture ftw) and I actually prefer many aspects of the workflow. But when I spend 90% of the time in the piano roll, it needs to be lightning fast.

  4. what is you don't like about the piano roll jimmy?

    first of all the color coded velocities is super helpful which fl misses out on

    If I may interject here, color coded velocities have nothing on the super simple editing of velocities that FL has. Just have the mouse in the general proximity of a note velocity on the bottom of the piano roll and adjust it to taste with a single click and without changing editing tools. You can also sweep the mouse across the velocities to change groups of them at once if you want. In Logic, as far as I can tell, you must have the pointer tool out and must click on the velocity and drag it to where you want it. And I know you can sweep across groups of velocities at once but I can't get it to work half the time. Basically, this stuff equates to more work and time, and it adds up quick.

    Also, my personal favorite feature of FL's piano roll, keyboard shortcuts where you don't have to manually switch back to your previous tool. Like if I want to cut a note I hold shift with the pencil tool active and it changes to the cutting tool. After I cut the note it switches back to the pencil tool automatically. Or I can hold shift+alt to cut while bypassing quantize settings.

    I have been trying to make the switch to Logic but the piano roll is a huge snag. I don't know if I'll ever get used to it.

  5. I just got some new monitors and had a problem with some kind of electrical interference, which I fixed by using the DC in on my firewire interface instead of using firewire bus power through the normal 6 pin cable. I tested the monitors in the store through the same interface on the same firewire cable that was giving me problems, and there was no hum in the store. Why might I have a problem when I set them up in my home studio? If I can go back to the other firewire cable, I'd prefer that so I can have a free outlet on my power strip.

    Also, I'm using instrument cable to run the audio through the monitors at the moment. Do I need to get some speaker cable or can I leave it as it is?

  6. What's up dude, you want to collab on this? I got some ideas. The chilled out vibe is pretty sweet and totally different from the original. In a good way of course.

    Obviously if you want this one to be your own thing that's cool too. I would say something has to be done about that choir sample that plays at 1:50. That kind of sample is really only good for sustaining chords and not like a lead sound.

  7. Let's say I am running a 64 bit operating system and have a 64 bit sequencer which I use to load a 32 bit sampler plugin. If I use the 4 GB of RAM allowed by 32 bit applications, can I just load another sampler and use another 4 GB of RAM with it and so on? This is assuming I have enough RAM to do this of course.

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