1

(5 replies, posted in Trading Post)

Yo E.S.C. my dude, how goes it?  I’ve been immersed in the world of being a dad/bread winner for the past decade but I still write music

2

(5 replies, posted in Trading Post)

I have one, what kind of stuff do you have for trade?

3

(14 replies, posted in Software & Plug-ins)

How I do you get to the piano roll? I can't seem to figure it out ; p

https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/13 … or-arduino

I came across this on matrixsynth, I thought it may interest some people here.  I am not affiliated with the project in anyway.

5

(31 replies, posted in Atari)

What type of audio interface do you have?  A really good audio/midi interface will reduce latency a ton. 

I've used some of those programs.  The timing is rock solid as described, but the user experience is nowhere near as smooth as something like ableton live or renoise.  I recommend trying them out on an emulator if you can figure out how to get past the dongles. 

If you are just syncing clocks then something like this is a better buy for you

http://innerclocksystems.com/New%20ICS% … 20Pro.html

There are other options like this out there as well, the basic idea is to use audio speeds for your midi.  Do you need just clock or are you sequencing synths?  If you are sequencing notes on renoise and sending them out to multiple synths you should be able to achieve acceptable latency without any extra hardware.

Going from a modern DAW to an atari midi sequencer = bad idea IMHO.  Something like maxymiser is for making chiptunes with the internal soundchip.  Those other programs just do midi, so bye bye audio and midi on 1 machine (I'm sure you use audio for at least drums, right?)  The ones that can do audio have archaic feature sets.  Never mind no more vst's.  If you want to use renoise and the ST at the same times that would be a workflow nightmare.  Thats just my 2 cents.  Leave the ST for the chiptunes, unless your Fatboy Slim and started out on an ST.

6

(257 replies, posted in Software & Plug-ins)

Is there a binary I could download of the newest version for PSP with the clock speed change? 

Also, the hardware/rPi thing is pretty interesting.

7

(10 replies, posted in Atari)

There is a windows editor I used to mess with if you want to forgo the atari.  It's called PSS Edit and you can get get it at the site I linked below.

http://members.chello.at/bobby100/Downloads.htm

8

(257 replies, posted in Software & Plug-ins)

I tried it out on my PSP, original model, with custom firmware 5.00.  It works, though it crashed twice in about a half hour, once while editing pitch lfo and once while changing some other parameter.  First crash required a hard reboot.

I'm a longtime nanoloop user, it's my favorite sequencer of all time (I've tried a bunch too).  So I'm glad to see this software.  I definently have a few suggestions for e future, after the program is fully stable (seems pretty close).  Thanks.