On Wed, 2004-06-09 at 11:04, Pelle Nilsson wrote: > Marek Peteraj <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > > ... > > Second thing is that the way you percieve them shouldn't change as you > > switch applications. Which is what VST perfectly fulfills - it provides > > its own UI. > > If I have 100 LADSPA plug-ins installed and 3 LADSPA hosts, I'd rather > spend my time learning the guis of the 3 host-applications than > learning the different guis of 100 plug-ins. That a plug-in then has > three different interfaces depending on in which application I use it > isn't a problem.
Well, no. As hosts only provide a slider for each parameter, there is absolutely no layout, controls aren't organised in a logical way. No visual clues - except a slider. All the parameters in all existing ladspa plugins can be (and usually are) fundamentally different, but you're only providing - a slider.(or a knob?) So you end up with 3x100. Look at the tape delay ladspa plugin for instance. Compare it to this for example: http://www.kvr-vst.com/i/b/asiofxproc.jpg Also, current ladspas are way to simple, so in order to achieve some more complex dsp schemes you need to put lots of ladspas in say one mixer strip. The order makes a difference, but there's no easy and obvious way to reorder them. http://www.beatmode.com/ohm-boyz/art/classic.jpg That tiny green glowing button (LPF) is exactly one ladspa plugin these days. Looking at the number of i/os is horrible. 1/1, 2/1 1/2 1/3 etc etc. Is that even close to usable? Marek
