Thanks so much for answering. Btw, I have had a loook at Tranzistow and used it for a few minutes (it's great), and I have looked at the patches and asked myself what could be the reason that I haven't done more than a few patches for my synthesizer yet. I'm not here to ask you about every little hurdle, but I do want to say that - when developing software over a long period - changing the synthesizer (e.g. changing the filter, not adding another) is, in my mind, one of the things that might require quite some energy - is that true? Or is it that at some point you have come up with a very definitive version of the synthesizer and never looked back?
I do think I have, at minimum, little talent for DSP and the other programming topics. I underestimated the time I need, and so the ready made software became interesting again, and it's just some circle that I have become acoustomed to now. The mix (my software, professional software) is okay too, but I would lie if I told you that I like how things go together. I'm still experimenting.
PS: About changing filters. If I'm not mistaken the C64 had different SID versions with differing filter cutoffs? And "nobody died from it." And, to find another example, Synth1 had a revamped version of their synthesis too, sounding brighter. But when I think I would have to accept everything sounding different or readjusting lots of patches, I trap into a mental loop. That's part of my missing-talent issue for programming, I can be stuck. But I am open to learn the lessons, having lots of respect for people who are good at design (and maths, which might help me there).
I do think I have, at minimum, little talent for DSP and the other programming topics. I underestimated the time I need, and so the ready made software became interesting again, and it's just some circle that I have become acoustomed to now. The mix (my software, professional software) is okay too, but I would lie if I told you that I like how things go together. I'm still experimenting.
PS: About changing filters. If I'm not mistaken the C64 had different SID versions with differing filter cutoffs? And "nobody died from it." And, to find another example, Synth1 had a revamped version of their synthesis too, sounding brighter. But when I think I would have to accept everything sounding different or readjusting lots of patches, I trap into a mental loop. That's part of my missing-talent issue for programming, I can be stuck. But I am open to learn the lessons, having lots of respect for people who are good at design (and maths, which might help me there).
Statistics: Posted by XrxT — Wed Nov 06, 2024 2:05 pm