Jump to content

abacab

Members
  • Posts

    9,210
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    59

Everything posted by abacab

  1. Once the source tracks have all been bounced and added to folder(s), it is a quick one-click operation to archive/un-archive those source tracks at the folder(s) level. Good tip!
  2. That looks like it will be a great package for starters. I have already collected most of that separately through the free players and various freebie giveaways. But that will be a big step forward having that all available in one bundle, along with the Komplete Kontrol software!
  3. Maybe watch for it here! https://www.bandlab.com/cakewalk_team
  4. You simply cannot install and use it without an internet connection. It's not an offline install.
  5. I would think that freezing all tracks that you are not working on at the moment would be the simplest thing to do, and give you the most CPU back to use for your current track. You can freeze tracks with the audio effects in place so you will still hear them in the frozen tracks, but without the extra CPU load from the FX plugin. It is similar to bouncing the track down with FX applied. Also by creating an FX bus and sending similar tracks to the same FX plugins would reduce the number of duplicate FX plugin instances used in the project, and that should lighten the CPU load.
  6. TTS-1 and Roland GrooveSynth load fine here without crashing on the latest version of CbB.
  7. Here's a version for Sonar 3 thru Platinum: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1qNsnKBASsnsALygDDQSQ4jFW6yhZIJZcIpfwH-6qgy0/pubhtml?gid=0&single=true
  8. Not exactly stupid, because that is exactly the plan. Withe the "Semi-Annual Channel", MS gives away an OS version upgrade to a multitude of free beta testers (mostly unsuspecting Home users), then they log any errors with the new versions via telemetry and fix most of them before the corporate (Enterprise) customers upgrade. The main idea behind using Pro is to be able defer the upgrades long enough to get in sync with the bug-fixed re-releases intended for the corporate crowd. Although you have the capability to permanently disable all updates, it would still be recommended to update eventually, because if you wait too long your version will become unsupported and you will no longer receive any patches. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/deployment/update/waas-overview#semi-annual-channel So it might be worth it for some home and small office folks to pay for the Pro version to avoid the headaches and interruptions that can come with initial new Win10 version releases to Home.
  9. Jim is absolutely correct here. The confusion maybe lies in the fact that there are multiple options and you have to dig into Group Policy Editor and configure specific policies to shut down the updates.
  10. Yup, thanks! That's one of those stoopid good deals!
  11. The BandLab Assistant update failed for me, had to download the installer manually. All good now.
  12. Jesse just confirmed here in this post: TheSteven was correct in his assumption!
  13. I saw the same thing. Full installer this time. Still on version 2019-01, but with new build number 27.
  14. For guitar sims, I would agree with the bundled TH3 Cakewalk, and the free Amplitube from IK Multimedia, and Guitar Rig from Native Instruments. Amplitube and Guitar Rig both have free versions. I don't play guitar, but I enjoy running my synths and guitar samples through them! For a virtual bass guitar amp, I like the Gallien-Krueger by Audiffex, available in the light version for free: https://shop.audified.com/products/live-guitar-and-bass-bundle-le
  15. Interesting... although sometimes you need to consider a review with a grain of salt. I took an MITx computer science class online via edX a few years ago, and had to purchase a textbook from MIT Press for that one. It matched up with the course syllabus well because it was written by the professors, and there were plenty of required reading assignments and the quizzes were literally based on the book. Something tells me that many MIT Press books are written for an audience of MIT students, not your typical KVR or YouTube students, LOL!
  16. Thanks for the heads up! You would think that the extra content would be made available online for customers if they are going to publish an ebook. If you really want the DVD, you can buy the hardcover version (new) at Amazon starting at $53.76. https://www.amazon.com/gp/offer-listing/0262014467/ref=dp_olp_new?ie=UTF8&condition=new Lists for $70 at the MIT Press store. https://mitpress.mit.edu/books/audio-programming-book
  17. Windows will continue to contact MS no matter what, unless you disconnect from the net. It is built-in to report diagnostic and usage data telemetry to the mothership, but that is not the same thing as updates. You can stop those updates. If it's disk activity that concerns you, as you mentioned, shutting down unnecessary services and scheduled tasks can reduce that. Having the OS on SSD also helps reduce the impact of background tasks on system performance.
  18. You can also drag the splitter bar between the strips in the track pane and the clips pane horizontally to the right . Resizing the track strips either vertically or horizontally will allow more track info to be displayed in them. Otherwise your view is truncated. It is simply a matter of selecting the MIDI channel #2 for that MIDI track. You should see 16 channels to choose from when you click the channel selector, after you have selected TTS-1 in the MIDI track output.
  19. Pay $1 or more. $15 scores the whole bundle! https://www.humblebundle.com/books/computer-music-books?linkID=&mcID=102:5c415d7542b929037503b546:ot:5a31f1dcc438005fac399577:1&utm_source=Humble+Bundle+Newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=2019_01_21_computermusic_bookbundle&linkID=&utm_content=cta_button
  20. Have you seen these? There are 50 video tutorials produced by StreamworksAudio for Sonar X2. They are probably complete enough to give a newcomer a good start on the core workflow, although it would lack many of the newer features. Those are probably not necessary to learn the basics though, and many professionals got their work done on even older versions of Sonar. The GUI hasn't been changed drastically since the X series introduced the "Skylight" interface. SWA Complete Sonar X2 https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLKRYWdEpbc5PgUgvrNuSvVyfv5qkll0qj This should be the index to the video chapter titles:
  21. True, but I can understand why they don't put it up for CbB users. It is not current, and they have no plans to update it. The Sonar Platinum local docs are still available via Cakewalk Command Center, or in "My Account > My Products" if you have the product in your old Cakewalk account.
  22. It's been years since I used my external hardware (including a Roland JV-1080), but I seem to recall the need to also set up an instrument definition file correctly in Cakewalk to be able to access the patches in the instrument banks.
  23. The official release notes for the current release are on the BandLab page here: https://www.bandlab.com/products/cakewalk/whats-new I just linked to the jump for "See previous release notes", for convenience (in case somebody did not see that little link at the bottom of the page). The previous notes for the 8 releases are archived on that google docs site. It is a simple matter to publish a revised doc to google docs, and at this point (I'm assuming) that it may be a matter of convenience to not have to update multiple web pages monthly. How much are you paying a month to have this documentation maintained?
×
×
  • Create New...