2012/8/6 Ralf Mardorf <[email protected]> > On Mon, 2012-08-06 at 10:38 +0400, Louigi Verona wrote: > > Of course, none of us knows whether the video is actually true, > > whether it is as as smooth as it appears to be, > > whether it really does work that well as seen in the demo. > > Correct, but I know other software able to do such stuff that easy. It > started with Cubase for the Atari ST in the 80s, with full automated > realtime SysEx editors (of course separated MIDI IOs) and it continued > with soft synth such as Alchemy VSTi, today gratis available for the > iPad. At least VSTis + Cubase for the PC should be have this > capabilities. > The short of it, Linux audio is far away from proprietary solutions. > I remember that somebody archived something like this with a Mac and a > full automated vocoder. He's subscribed to LAU and or LAD. > > http://www.audiogl.com/en/audiogl seems to be for Windows only. > > One of tons of synth that can do similar: > http://www.camelaudio.com/Alchemy.php > > This works glitch free on an iPad2 too, at least the free iPad version > is lighter. > > http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pTVm9RWfhyE > > You are aware of all those hardware vector synth from the 80s? Or the > much older ARP step synth? > > AudioGL is new for me, but it's not a new idea, such stuff is available > since a long, long time ago. > > Regards, > Ralf > > > reminds me a bit of reactable, or the open variant psychosynth (see http://www.psychosynth.com/index.php/Main_Page) Thijs
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