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The obvious reason to emulate, in my humble opinion, is so you can save state as part of a global preset for your rig (assuming you use a master controller of some kind like a MIDI pedal) and also avoid another failure point. I'm big on the one-button total-recall thing. -Alex S. On Jan 27, 2005, at 7:31 PM, Timothy Mungenast wrote: > "why emulate it...just use it." > > Well, I did just that last year by adapting a toy circuit to stompbox > use, > and in the words of Robert Quine "it makes the most offensive noise!" > It's > like the pitch-to-voltage synth in that old Adrian Belew instructional > video. Choas in a box, and I've not heard anybody come close to it's > Chewbaccaesque vocoder-through-ringmod antics. No, a vocoder and a > ringmod > still wouldn't be as effed up as this thing. But it wasn't easy. I > came up > with the idea, but a friend at Lexicon did the real brain work of > adapting > the circuit to guitar, and it still needs to be hit very hard with a > big > compressed signal to overcome the gate which is built into the chip, > but > that's part of the charm. > > Am I ready to go down that road again, adapting a toy to guitar use? > hmmmmmm.......the Nokia info is loking more and more intriguing... > > ~Tim > > >> [Original Message] >> From: Dean Stiglitz <deknow@netzero.com> >> To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com> >> Date: 1/27/2005 7:32:55 PM >> Subject: Re: emulating a cheap sampling toy >> >> ...i say, if you have the toy in the house, why emulate it...just use >> it. >> that said, i did recently read something about a vst plugin that is >> part > of >> the nokia development kit (free, but some back and forth confirmation > emails >> are required apparantly) that models the tiny speakers in cell phones >> (so >> you can hear your ringtone as it would sound on a real phone). >> >> deknow >> > > >