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There's a review of Eigenharp in this months Sound On Sound. No mention of Osc. Each button is polyhonically pressure sensitive, and sends controllers if pushed in either X or Y axis. 2 Ribbon controllers, absolute or relative either side of "fingerboard". Main controller is connected to a base station by a "starquad cable". ...which indicates a serial protocol, so I'd be checking for latency beyond that expected by a usb controller. Anyway, I guess you guys are more into the pico. 18 keys 4 simple buttons usb connection (no base station) £349 Both models use the same control software, which can host soundfont, au and send out midi & audio. To get any flexibility worth having, you need to learn a language called "Belcanto", something the reviewer did not attempt. andy butler personally, I'm sticking with the klarnet :-) Per Boysen wrote: > On Wed, Nov 4, 2009 at 2:01 PM, Os <os@collective.co.uk> wrote: >> I think you need to re-read what's already online. There are no >> onboard sounds at all - it's all done on the Mac. > > Ah, that's good news! I was under the impression that the Mac software > is just a sort of extension of the Eigenharp's built-in hardware. > Anyway, I'm still interested in hearing about advanced controller > capabilities. MIDI and OSC specifications? How many physical > continuous controller tools? Do they work at the same time as you are > playing "notes"? Someone mentioned in a video it is "Apple Loop > compatible", so does that mean you import an Apple Loop into a memory > and trig it from the pads on the Eigenharp? Or can you even create an > Apple Loop *inside* the Eigenharp from what you are playing? And if > that is possible - is the process real-time or is it like in Logic; > you load up a utility where you type in characteristics for the loop > and save it to disk. > > per > >