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Some MIDI equipment is decidedly unhappy with running state. As I recall, when I had MIDI software that exploited this, it would crash my Korg DDD-1 drum machine fairly hard. I forget how I worked out that that was what was going on. My fix was to insert a MIDI Manager module -- this is effectively ancient history -- that doubled all of the note sends on an extra channel so that running state wouldn't apply. Mark P.S. I sold off the DDD-1 a while ago for not a lot of money. I've been listening to some old recordings I did with it and realizing that in some sense I haven't had nearly as much success creating drum loops with its successors, an Alesis SR-16 and a Roland MC-505. What I think I really want is a MIDI version of the EDP with the additional benefit of being able to do things like erase notes, tweak quantization, etc.. Any suggestions? on 10/19/01 1:09 AM, Matthias Grob at matthias@grob.org wrote: >> Thanks, Matthias, >> >>> the advantage is that its safer, since you only send out complete >> commands. >> >> and: can you explain what you mean by "safer"? >> >> bruce > > Using RunningState, if any byte gets lost or altered, or a unit is > switched into a rolling MIDI stream, then the whole sequence of MIDI > commands looses sense, whereas if you repeat the main command byte > with each date byte, the error is limited to one command. But I dont > think you have to consider this.