thanks for your good comments!
more to come, this time on the gameboy.
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ChipMusic.org / Forums / Posts by Analog
thanks for your good comments!
more to come, this time on the gameboy.
Frostbyte, care to elaborate?
(sound cards specs, computer, you know the drill )
i can help, i was in the same place than you guys don't getting the Souncard to work.
got my saffire Le firewire soundcard configured and that was the most difficult part. (with the ffado drivers). but once you got it working, it will never fail. at least that's my experience.
with LGPT, renoise, puredata and ardour i got all my needs covered.
i've tried raster music tracker with WINE and works perfect. Not so sure about famitracker.
there is also Neil, an interesting buzz clone.
this computer i'm using for production is not new, it have four years so it's not that amazing in proccesor and hard disk access departament. So linux have really helped me to get the most out of my machine.
Right now i got a problem with choosing a distribution, i have installed debian but the wifi drivers are a pain to install, can't invest that time figuring that out. Pure: dyne is something i really want to try, and MUSIX is also a great distro, tried it before with good results.
Currently i'm using ubuntu 10.4 running the rt-kernel with the old firewire stack. two months ago i was in 8.4; it fucking rocks, but got a lot of dependencies problem using new versions of the programs.
In my humble opinion ubuntu isn't really mature with the new releases (two major updates a year, sometimes dependencies are broken and what works in a previous version don't work in a new one.) the best is to try a Long term support version (LTS).
Frostbyte, what's your problem with your card? which one is it?
i'll recommend linux. you can run renoise greatly on it, LGPT, and another amazing well known software. but not everything. the VST's can't run natively on it, but you have options.
the weak point is that you need to deal with the configurations, and get used to other software (or way of seeing it).
for example a nice DAW is ardour, but in the plugins departament you'll find a lot of options, and the result may not be as great as you could want. I recommend invada, CALF and several LV2 plugins. i'l stick on linux because of puredata, it works not so great in windows,
And using audio in real time with a dedicated kernel is really great. and the JACK audio software will let you "rewire" any aplications that spits audio, and do crazy stuff imposible in windows, never tried mac OS but i'm very tempted to buy me a machine.
loving your work man, i really do.
Hoping more obscure designs in the future !
Six different creations related by a lo-fi dirty sound design.
Grab it for free in any quality and format that you may like Here
LGPT. Lots of royalty free samples from freesounds and the like. Sometimes, hard manipulation of the source materials and a little post-proccesing. Composed on dingux.
can't see the link
Oliver answered. i'll sent it to him. thank for the input guys.
the tile says it all, i'm a little frustrated because my brand new copy of nanoloop 2.5 (purchased from the nanoloop website) don't work on the gba micro that i've just borrowed, and in a nintendo Ds it isn't booting also. i'm guessing that perhaps is the fact that the custom cart PCB don't have a friendly shape for the cart pins?
the second problem, is a weird buzz on the GBA classic, it always loads the NL cart perfectly, but in the second it access the flash memory at the beggining, a buzz is very present and i hate it.
won't you NL users on a gba classic have this? perhaps this revision of the cart is faulty or my copy is a little akward.
please share your experiences, so far i'm only having bad times everytime i try to use this thing.
hey, that is a gba prosounded? how you do it?
what do you exactly need? i can compose it and record it if needed, at a cheap sudaca price. ( with real life musicians and the like, depends on what you'll need.)
according to this, pin 13 and 15 are the out. so we can jump that to the pot, kill the old traces, and then from post pot go to the jack, correct?
those resistors are pre-amp, like wedanced suggested. So, the amp will take the broken resistor sound output, which sound awfull. we need a pre-resistor sound output, if such thing exists.
is no other place to take out the sound output?
hey arfink, take your time man!
and you better start selling this babies at some point!!!
those resistors are very small,... i've succesfully killed both on my gba's PCB. FAIL.
thanks a lot wedanced, i'm going yo give it a try, and see how it behaves...
ChipMusic.org / Forums / Posts by Analog