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Yes - I understand that one button pressed long, short, or in one of 2 or three modes does give me a lot of different functions. Real-estate on the EDP face-plate is small, so you gotta make choices. The Adrenalinn uses the same grid-style of interface. So do the Korg Etribe machines. Of course if I was driving a car and the accelerator and the brake were the same pedal, and all I needed to do was switch modes between patches, I'd end up with a road wreck pretty quick. It's a great rack-mount unit, don't get me wrong. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Matthias Grob" <matthias@grob.org> To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com> Sent: Saturday, August 24, 2002 8:19 PM Subject: Re: EDP Hardware Interface > >What you guy are pointing out to me is that many more features are > >accessible from the existing EDP hardware interface than I'm taking > >advantage of. > > happens to everyone ;-) > > > And that some others capabilities are easiest accessed via a midi controller. > > very few ones, actually: about 5 DirectMIDI commands and the direct > switching between loops. > Also the direct access to all parameters through Sysex, but thats the > same for every MIDI machine > > >Dealing with all these variables/parameters live and while playing > >with other people is just a headful of stuff to keep track of. > > probably you find a few ways that correspond to your music and/or the > situation (band) and then get used to those. > > >I guess I'm just a bit of a bonehead and hate dealing with manuals. > > also very common. A lot you discover by trying. > Remember that a yellow LED means that you get a different function if > you press that button. > > > AURISIS -- is the Loop IV software code-base portable to the PC and > >MAC OS's?? > > no, its written in ASM, directly for that HW. > I am rewriting it in C++ now, but I dont think it will become > available for the computers too soon. > > -- > > > ---> http://Matthias.Grob.org > >