Support |
i think this is what they are referring to as the latency issue. most i/o on a pc used to be buffered. the size of the buffer gives you protection if the cpu is busy for a while, but at the cost of disallowing changes to occur to the buffered data. bigger buffer, easier on cpu, bigger latency.... for those with the means and the computer dweeb inclination, kyma promises a latency of less than 1 sample. (so it's only a problem when i play REAL fast) and dennis has some cool looper tools for kyma (available "soon" i hear) i have a pulsar card which promises very low latency, and seems to deliver, but i haven't really used it for real time performance... both of these deliver low latency by using dsp on the audio device instead of cpu for signal processing calculations. maybe as cpu speeds go into the stratosphere and multimedia becomes more important (tv/phone/radio/stereo/browser/pc merge) this will become unnecessary... anyone know how apple is delivering cpu time on demand? > Re: Reaktor -- computer loopingI tried it some time ago (probably at >least a > year ago). Seemed to work fine but you could not capture a loop live by > tapping it in. [You know: 1) tap a button and start playing, 2) play > awhile, 3) tap a button to stop recording and start playback.] > Consequently, it did not seem suitable for a live performance. But maybe > it's changed since then... > > Dennis Leas > ------------------- > dennis@mdbs.com > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: Steve Sandberg > To: Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com > Sent: Tuesday, December 04, 2001 3:14 PM > Subject: Re: Reaktor -- computer looping > > > Speaking of laptop computer looping, has anyone fooled around with Polar, > the Digital Performer looping plugin? I have DP, and it's just occurred >to > me that this might be a cool live tool for loopers -- haven't >investigated > it myself, tho. >