On Friday, 13 September 2013 at 23:03:16 UTC, Iain Buclaw wrote:
On 13 September 2013 22:18, John Colvin
<[email protected]> wrote:
On Friday, 13 September 2013 at 16:27:11 UTC, Iain Buclaw
wrote:
On Sep 13, 2013 9:53 AM, "Russel Winder"
<[email protected]> wrote:
On Wed, 2013-09-11 at 14:56 +0200, Sönke Ludwig wrote:
[…]
> Regarding the dub music genre, it has to be said that >
> although it is
> the
> root for dubstep and in turn ... brostep, it's usually not
> > really
> comparable result-wise and I have a strong desire to avoid
> > putting
> the
> word "step" somewhere in proximity of "DUB" ;)
Perhaps this is the last word on the dubstep issue :-)
http://www.mazbox.com/synths/dubstep/
Someone should port to D. In fact that's one thing I'd
definitely would
like to start a case for - using D in audio processing (eg:
effects,
synths
:-)
Regards
Me too. Unfortunately the whole pro-audio plugin industry is
completely
wrapped around steinbergs little finger, doing everything as
VSTs in c++.
Perhaps you haven't heard of LV2? http://lv2plug.in/
It looks OK, but VST has an almost complete stranglehold (with
the exception of AU on OS-X I suppose). Linux and open source
have really failed to make much of an impact in the world of
audio. Almost all the pros are on OSX/Windows with £500+ DAWs*
and thousands of pounds of closed source VST plugins. A large
proportion of free VSTs aren't even open source.
*The notable exception being Reaper, which is very affordable and
quite widely used these days.