Re: [doggiebox] Re: Doggiebox feedback
On 10 2 2003 at 6:30 pm -0500, Steve McNally wrote:
2) Ability to keep initial beat when increasing resolution i.e. I first have 4/4 with some 4 highhats, two kicks and two snares; when i go to 64/64, those 8 notes should be in time where they ought to be and I can add additional notes from there. (Virtual Drummer does this)
I'm not sure I understand what you're illustrating here; can you describe the issue in a bit more detail Steve?
4) Not really a feature request, but: What is DoggieBox doing when it samples an AIFF? Why is the resulting sound different from the input file?
Huh... what do you mean, is it being mangled? What are the properties of your source file (in terms of bit depth, sample rate and channels)? The only difference you should find is the level; the input will be attenuated slightly in the mix. If things are indeed wacky, if you can send me an example that would be cool -- the source audio file, and then the drum kit file, would be useful to compare. -b -- Ben Kennedy, chief magician zygoat creative technical services 613-228-3392 | 1-866-466-4628 http://www.zygoat.ca
On Monday, February 10, 2003, at 06:40 PM, Ben Kennedy wrote:
On 10 2 2003 at 6:30 pm -0500, Steve McNally wrote:
2) Ability to keep initial beat when increasing resolution i.e. I first have 4/4 with some 4 highhats, two kicks and two snares; when i go to 64/64, those 8 notes should be in time where they ought to be and I can add additional notes from there. (Virtual Drummer does this)
I'm not sure I understand what you're illustrating here; can you describe the issue in a bit more detail Steve?
Sure - Open a song. Double-click a bar that has notes in it. Time sig dialog comes up. Change the existing time sig from 4/4 (e.g.) to 8/8. The original notes stay in "their original position" rather than into the correct beats in time. It would be much preferable if increasing resolution would keep the original beat specified intact.
4) Not really a feature request, but: What is DoggieBox doing when it samples an AIFF? Why is the resulting sound different from the input file?
Huh... what do you mean, is it being mangled? What are the properties of your source file (in terms of bit depth, sample rate and channels)? The only difference you should find is the level; the input will be attenuated slightly in the mix.
the level / attenuation might be it, then. I will look for specific examples of inputs and how they appear different (IMO) in the output. Again, thanks for Doggiebox - S
On 11,02,03 at 8:15 am -0500, Steve McNally wrote:
Open a song. Double-click a bar that has notes in it. Time sig dialog comes up.
Change the existing time sig from 4/4 (e.g.) to 8/8.
The original notes stay in "their original position" rather than into the correct beats in time. It would be much preferable if increasing resolution would keep the original beat specified intact.
Hi Steve, I understand what you're getting at now. However, this might be more complicated in practice when you consider the ramifications of different time signatures... for example, how would you handle a change from 4/4 to 3/8? Or from 7/4 to 2/2 ? -ben -- Ben Kennedy, chief magician zygoat creative technical services 613-228-3392 | 1-866-466-4628 http://www.zygoat.ca
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