| Looking for 220V Roland PSU [message #99489] |
Sun, 13 July 2008 11:16  |
Deej [5]
Messages: 373 Registered: March 2008
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Senior Member |
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oes. There may be hardware configurations that don't
>>like what I've done. But, my IF2 now work, and it wasn't working well
as
>>of the last build.
>>
>>I hope this clears up any questions about what I'm doing. I'll try to
package
>>these changes into a proper installer once I'm done building, which will
>>probably be soon. I think we're almost there.
>&
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| Re: Looking for 220V Roland PSU [message #99492 is a reply to message #99489] |
Sun, 13 July 2008 15:10   |
Dimitrios
 Messages: 1056 Registered: August 2005
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Senior Member |
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http://www.reaper.fm/
>>
>> We use it for live recording all the time, and it's been solid as a
>> rock. It also contains a number of features that make it excelllent for
>
>> live recording - for example, you can set it to save audio files on the
>
>> fly when they reach a certain size, so you never wind up with "poof,
>> it's all gone!" even when recording a full evening at a go. Even a
>> disaster like a kicked-out power bar can be fully recoverable, unlike
>> some apps that shrug and leave you nothing but a "whaddya?" (in fact,
>> that feature right there is part of what prompted my partner's shift to
>
>> REAPER for live work).
>>
>> Great sound quality, a ton of plugins and features, and all this for
>> cheap. No dongle for aggressive dancers to bump out; in fact, no copy
>
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| Re: Looking for 220V Roland PSU [message #99509 is a reply to message #99492] |
Mon, 14 July 2008 09:13   |
Deej [5]
Messages: 373 Registered: March 2008
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Senior Member |
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on your HD) you can't go wrong trying it out.
>>>
>>> http://www.reaper.fm/
>>>
>>> We use it for live recording all the time, and it's been solid as a
>>> rock. It also contains a number of features that make it excelllent for
>>
>>> live recording - for example, you can set it to save audio files on the
>>
>>> fly when they reach a certain size, so you never wind up with "poof,
>>> it's all gone!" even when recording a full evening at a go. Even a
>>> disaster like a kicked-out power bar can be fully recoverable, unlike
>>> some apps that shrug and leave you nothing but a "whaddya?" (in fact,
>>> that feature right there is part of what prompted my partner's shift
to
>>
>>> REAPER for live work).
>>>
>>> Great sound quality, a ton of plugins and features, and all this for
>>> cheap. No dongle for aggressive dancers to bump out; in fact, no copy
>>> protection of any sort, it's honor system. 30 day non-expiring
>>> shareware (you get a five-second nag at boot after 30 days), then $50
>>> for non-commercial use and $225 for full commercial license. There's
no
>>
>>> difference between the functionality of "trial", "paid" and "paid
>>> commercial" though, it's honor system and it's upgradeable so you can
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| Re: Looking for 220V Roland PSU [message #99517 is a reply to message #99513] |
Mon, 14 July 2008 21:25   |
Deej [5]
Messages: 373 Registered: March 2008
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Senior Member |
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be Reaper.
>>The Presonus does not work right with Presonus gear so you will ahve to
>
>>use Reaper of other host.
>>The older FP10(Firepod works fine but all the Firestudio based units do
>
>>not work well becuase of the way Sonar does its ASIO.
>>
>>Chris
>>
>>
>>
>>Gantt Kushner wrote:
>>> Reaper certainly is worth checking out! I'm trying to figure out if the
> Presonus
>>> Firestudio is worth the extra $$$ over the FP10 (AKA Firepod). Both
>>> allegedly
>>> have the super groovy mic pres and firewire. Both seek to have line
>>> outs.
>>> The Firestudio seems to have better S/N in the digi output.
>>>
>>> I dunno. I need to do this on the cheap!
>>>
>>> Gantt
>>>
>>> KerryGalloway <Report message to a moderator
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| Re: Looking for 220V Roland PSU [message #99518 is a reply to message #99512] |
Mon, 14 July 2008 21:26  |
Deej
Messages: 130 Registered: September 2006
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Senior Member |
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om" target="_blank">kg@kerrygalloway.com> wrote:
>>>> Heya Gantt - REAPER is definitely ready for prime time. For the cost
>
>>>> involved (zero, and a painless install that does absolutely zero
>>>> invasive stuff on your HD) you can't go wrong trying it out.
>>>>
>>>> http://www.reaper.fm/
>>>>
>>>> We use it for live recording all the time, and it's been solid as a
>>>> rock. It also contains a number of features that make it excelllent for
>>>
>>>> live recording - for example, you can set it to save audio files on the
>>>
>>>> fly when they reach a certain size, so you never wind up with "poof,
>
>>>> it's all gone!" even when recording a full evening at a go. Even a
>>>> disaster like a kicked-out power bar can be fully recoverable, unlike
>
>>>> some apps that shrug and leave you nothing but a "whaddya?" (in fact,
>
>>>> that feature right there is part of what prompted my partner's shift
> to
>>>
>>>> REAPER for live work).
>>>>
>>>> Great sound quality, a ton of plugins and features, and all this for
>
>>>> cheap. No dongle for aggressive dancers to bump out; in fact, no copy
>
>>>> protection of any sort, it's honor system. 30 day non-expiring
>>>> shareware (you get a five-second nag at boot after 30 days), then $50
>
>>>> for non-commercial use and $225 for full c
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