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Chinese knock off plugins [message #79218] Mon, 29 January 2007 16:30 Go to next message
Dedric Terry is currently offline  Dedric Terry   UNITED STATES
Messages: 788
Registered: June 2007
Senior Member
know him the last couple of years. He's as good
a guy as he is a player...

:)


"DJ" <www.aarrrrggghhh!!!.com> wrote:
>Some of the ugliest moments of my young life were related to interactions

>with fellow band members and asshole promoters/managers. It's been almost

>35 years since I have spoken to some o
Re: Chinese knock off plugins [message #79222 is a reply to message #79218] Mon, 29 January 2007 16:50 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Dedric Terry is currently offline  Dedric Terry   UNITED STATES
Messages: 788
Registered: June 2007
Senior Member
gital.com/us_effectchainer_features.html
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>"Dimitrios" <musurgio@otenet.gr> wrote:
>>>
>>>Hi,
>>>There is a new chainer which has a great advantage ,it is a DX AND vst
>chainer
>>>both in one !!
>>>So you can either load the vst chainer and from within select vst and/or
>>>dx or use the dx chainer and do the same.
>>>So by using the vst chainer you can overcome the DX limit of 64 because
>>it
>>>opens as vst.
>>>p till now we had the free FFX4 that could chain dx on after the other
>in
>>>only one slot.
>>>Now you can use this chainer as your only chainer and use its vst and
dx
>>>capabilities.
>>&g
Re: Chinese knock off plugins [message #79224 is a reply to message #79222] Mon, 29 January 2007 19:01 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Neil is currently offline  Neil
Messages: 1645
Registered: April 2006
Senior Member
r /> fan..


"TCB" <nobody@ishere.com> wrote:
>
>I'm increasingly convinced that _everyone_ should buy RME gear unless there
>is a _very_ good reason to do otherwise. I've been in my hotel room in Bangkok
>a lot during the days this week (way to hot to go anywhere), working on
tracks
>with my crappy $500 Acer laptop and my cardbus RME RPM. It just sits there
>and works and doesn't bother me and generally kicks ass in the way that
something
>that should disappear can kick ass. I sort of regret ever selling any of
>my RME gear and if I can stretch the recording budget I'm probably going
>to pick up a pair of PCI cards and a pair of Mutlifaces to give myself 16
>channels of RME conversion for tracking.
>
>TCB
>
>P.S. Bangkok kicks staggering amounts of ass. I have _never_ had food this
>good in my life. It's insane. And not just Thai food. It's the best Indian,
>Malaysian, Japanese, etc. I order 'tom yam soup' and I get a bowl of heavenly,
>slightly curried broth with a half dozen different kinds of seafood, a few
>of which I can't even identify. The only drawback is having to see all of
>the girls with creepy, ugly old guys and the heat, which I imagine is roughly
>the temperature that my room in hell will be.
>
>"DJ" <www.aarrrrggghhh!!!.com> wrote:
>>What a piece of junque.
>>
>>;o(
>>
>>
>But, what if Edmund had fixed:

The Midi:
Re: Chinese knock off plugins [message #79225 is a reply to message #79224] Mon, 29 January 2007 18:23 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Jeff hoover is currently offline  Jeff hoover   UNITED STATES
Messages: 22
Registered: January 2007
Junior Member
/> No Lockups
Support.
????????
Personally Iwould not care if Paris ever had a midi sequencer..

"LaMont" <jjdpro@ameritech.net> wrote:
>
>Lol!!!! Well, do have a point..That would be a great
>
>"Neil" <OIUOIU@OIU.com> wrote:
>>
>>"lamont" <jjdpro@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>please I'D partner up with somebody to revive paris..even if it's just
>a
>>>mixer.recorder..editor....pleaseee...
>>
>>We don't need a no-midi, lockup-prone, buggy, unsupported app
>>like Paris to be resurrected, we just need Cubase to be able to
>>work with an EDS card.
>>
>>:D
>>
>>(OH! And a PCI-based 16-input rackmount A/D convertor set with
>>ASIO drivers, please! Thank you!)
>>
>>That would make me the happiest non-protools-using muthafacka
>>on the planet.
>>
>>Neil
>Enjoy...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KM_MkWgbt3kSweet!!!! Thanks Dimitrios..

"Dimitrios" <musurgioNOSpam@otenet.gr> wrote:
>
>Sorry NO demo its FREE !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
>Cheers,
>Dimitrios
>
>http://www.acondigital.com/us_effectchainer_features.html
>
>
>
>
>
>"Dimitrios" <musurgio@otenet.gr> wrote:
>>
>>Hi,
>>There is a new chainer which has a great advantage ,it is a DX AND vst
chainer
>>both in one !!
>>So you c
Re: Chinese knock off plugins [message #79226 is a reply to message #79224] Mon, 29 January 2007 18:46 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Dedric Terry is currently offline  Dedric Terry   UNITED STATES
Messages: 788
Registered: June 2007
Senior Member
an either load the vst chainer and from within select vst and/or
>>dx or use the dx chainer and do the same.
>>So by using the vst chainer you can overcome the DX limit of 64 because
>it
>>opens as vst.
>>p till now we had the free FFX4 that could chain dx on after the other
in
>>only one slot.
>>Now you can use this chainer as your only chainer and use its vst and dx
>>capabilities.
>>I tried the demo and works and looks just fine.
>>The chainer is called.
>>EffectChainer from Acon Digital Media.
>>Hope this helps...
>>Regards,
>>Dimitrios
>"DC" <dc@spammersinhell.com> wrote in message news:45f95494$1@linux...
> Interesting that you could diagnose this from such a distance on the
> available evidence.

From the little evidence that has been presented, it does seem to be a
reasonable conclusion.

> Also, I would hope you realize that for many people, suicide has a moral
> dimension beyond mere choice. Notice also that you happily present
> suicide as a choice and depression without one.

On March 27th, it will be ten years since my own father took his life.
Depression definitely contributed to his choice. I believe that depression
has a strong genetic component that can be softened or exacerbated by many
environmental factors...

I have had periodic battles with depression myself. At one point, about a
year and a half before my father died, I was taken to a local hospital and
placed on a suicide watch. I had always thought that I would be the one to
kill myself - imagine my shock when my father was the one to go. It was a
profound lesson, and really helped me to reevaluate my own life. I am
thankful for that lesson. But what a cost...

I'm sure that my father could have been described with many of the same
words that have been used about Brad Delp. He was always the "fixer,"
always helping others, yet not allowing anyone to "fix" him. It's a bind
that is hard to get out of...

Doug

http://www.parisfaqs.comyes it does..Thank my Paris friend..

"Dimitrios" <musurgioNOSPAM@otenet.gr> wrote:
>
>This looks great you can reroute the plugins the way you want ! you can
now
>disable DX in Paris cfg so Paris loads very quick and let chainer look at
>you DX.
>I am really amazed for the simplicity and and effectiveness of this chainer.
>A must have for Paris users.
>It is free too !
>So now I can make a project consisting of 64 instances of this chainer (4
>eds cards) and inside this chainer having faderworks loaded.
>You can imagine this a Paris update that fixes vst and dx anomalies...
>Regards,
>Dimitrios
>
>
>
>
>
>"Dimitrios" <musurgioNOSpam@otenet.gr> wrote:
>>
>>Sorry NO demo its FREE !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
>>Cheers,
>>Dimitrios
>>
>>http:/
Re: Chinese knock off plugins [message #79236 is a reply to message #79218] Mon, 29 January 2007 21:26 Go to previous messageGo to next message
TCB is currently offline  TCB
Messages: 1261
Registered: July 2007
Senior Member
r />
I think they are both nutz...

I want one that says:
Lifes' a bitch! and then you go to heaven...

Works for me.

best

DC1.25 gHz (mine is dual processor, but it doesn't help in OS 9) with Firewire
400. The next generation had Firewire 800. They're not dual-boot machines.

Most tracks/native FX? Today I was running 46 tracks with a handful of UAD-1
plugins (couple of Cambridge EQs, couple of Pultec-Pros, couple of LA-2a
comps) and a few Waves EQs, comps and flangers. I ran a stress test once
w/ 64 audio tracks playing, but I don't think I ran any plugins on it.

Gantt

Paul Braun <cygnus_nospam@ctgonline.org> wrote:
>But I can't remember. Which MDD G4 is the last one to boot OS9?
>
>I'm going to upgrade my studio Mac and put my Sawtooth 450 into my
>mobile recording rack.
>
>Also, those of you running one, what's the most amount of
>tracks/native efx you've used?
>
>Thanks.
>
>pabI send a lot of folks to Rich Krentz at eopco.com. Tell him I sent you -
maybe he'll be really nice to me when i finally record my own CD!

Gantt

"Louis Guar
Re: Antress plugins (was...) [message #79244 is a reply to message #79236] Mon, 29 January 2007 22:03 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Dedric Terry is currently offline  Dedric Terry   UNITED STATES
Messages: 788
Registered: June 2007
Senior Member
BoardsParam=PostID%3D4798266

Amen...

Doug

http://www.parisfaqs.com"TCB" <nobody@ishere.com> wrote:
>
>Well, Don, one doesn't need to be Sigmund effin Freud to guess that when
a
>healthy, financially and emotionally secure adult male with a family kills
>himself he might have been depressed. And reading what the family said ('he's
>now at peace' instead of 'we had no idea') makes it a notably stronger case.


Gee I didn't realize Freud was still in vogue... My point was that
"depression" is too easy and tells us next to nothing.



>Further, how you could say I 'happily' present suicide as a choice when
in
>precisely that sentence I say that what he did was 'sad?' I was only observing
>that in many societies (as a history buff ancient Rome and Greece come immediately
>to mind) suicide was considered a viable and socially accepted choice,

So, in that context, does your sadness amount to anything other than
a tossed-off fake sympathy?

After all, suicide can be a "viable and socially accepted choice" right?

There are other views, of course.


>it remains today not just a choice but kind of the ultimate choice. In addition,
>in our modern society in certain situations--like taking suicidal risks
in
>wartime--leaving one's life on the table is considered heroic.

None of which consitute suicide, so of course the reaction is, and
should be, different.


>All of which is far too subtle for a blinkered mind such as your own. Your
>point is that if everyone would go to the gym and love Jesus there wouldn't
>be any depressed people anymore. I don't get offended by your pedantry anymore,
>that ended a few years ago. But from personal experience I can tell you
that
>I come from a family of hard
Re: Antress plugins (was...) [message #79245 is a reply to message #79244] Mon, 29 January 2007 23:11 Go to previous messageGo to next message
TCB is currently offline  TCB
Messages: 1261
Registered: July 2007
Senior Member
working, god fearing, Jesus loving, workout
>enjoying people and off the top of my head I can count six suicides among
>the males in the past three generations, and that's not counting the ones
>who took the slow ride via drugs and drink.


I can show you reams of evidence that these things work. Further, I doubt
your family is a good example of their failure. At least not if they are
as prejudiced and bitter as you appear to be. I think you can do
better. If you were really anything resembling an intellectual you
would be more tolerant. Just a thought.


>The women are either of sturdier
>emotional stock or are contributing factors in the suicides because they
>all live forever. I believe one of the primary reasons my own father decided
>to get a doctorate in psychology was to better understand some of the demons
>that his, and my, family face. But I guess he would have been better off
>with a Stairmaster and a copy of the Good Book.

I take it the Psych major worked for him? I sure hope so.

What works for you?


>P.S. While my hatred of the stateside twice born remains intact, my suspicion
>of spirituality in general has been shaken by this trip to Thailand. It's
>my third time here, and each time I've made a few new friends and gotten
>closer to actual Thais. The country is over 90% Buddhist and their spirituality
>in the face of very real hardships is inspiring. I've never encountered
a
>sweeter, gentler group of people in my life. I've gotten to know the (unspeakably
>gorgeous) girls who work in the swank restaurant/bar in my hotel, and three
>of them just went on holiday together earlier this week. Where? To a Buddhist
>temple that cares for Thais with AIDS. They used their _vacation_ to take
>food and medicine and money to some people seriously fucked over by the
world.
>One of the motivations was a friend of theirs who recently came out as gay
>to them, which is a far, far bigger deal in Thailand than in the US. And
>instead of doing what would be easy, i.e. throwing the person out of their
>life for making the wrong 'choice,' they embraced him and did something
to
>help the gay community in their country. I remain an atheist and make no
>pretensions to Buddhism, but having seen how their piety brings out the
noble
>traits of charity and understanding I can no longer dismiss all religion
>out of hand. Having seen what their quiet and sincere spirituality does
for
>Thais I have no choice but to respect it. I just despise closed minded holy
>roller US fuckheads that much more.


There is much to learn from Buddhism.

Your hate for people of
Re: Antress plugins (was...) [message #79247 is a reply to message #79245] Mon, 29 January 2007 22:20 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Dedric Terry is currently offline  Dedric Terry   UNITED STATES
Messages: 788
Registered: June 2007
Senior Member
ch as your own.

While I think I understand your sentiment and might actually go so far
as to say that Don is what I would term a "close-minded believer," I
would like to hope that there is still an opportunity to help him see
that God has allowed, and indeed created, other realities in the world
besides his own. It is obvious to me that his reality works for him, as
much as it may not work for others, and vice versa, but clubbing him on
the head isn't going to change his attitude, but merely make him retreat
deeper into that reality, building further artificial distinctions
between his chosen group and others...

> P.S. While my hatred of the stateside twice born remains intact,

While it is easy to see a stereotype of Bush-loving, NASCAR-watching,
Support-our-solders, WWE-fan, pickup-truck-driving, Wal-Mart shopping,
born-again, self-righteous, judgmental, evangelical fundamentalists, not
ALL of them are mindless sheep who lack spirituality...

> my suspicion of spirituality in general has been shaken by this
> trip to Thailand.

Thailand seems to be a magnificent place. Many people in my martial
arts and oriental medicine school have traveled there to study, and I
hope to join them on a future trip.

> The country is over 90% Buddhist and their spirituality
> in the face of very real hardships is inspiring.

I find true spirituality of any kind to be inspiring. While I myself
have chosen a Zen Buddhist path, my teacher is not only a Roshi, but
also a Catholic Priest, and someone I greatly admire.

> I remain an atheist and make no pretensions to Buddhism, but having
> seen how their piety brings out the noble traits of charity and
> understanding I can no longer dismiss all religion out of hand.

Would it seem odd if I said to you that you can be atheist and Buddhist
at the same time?

DougDoug Wellington <doug@parisfaqs.com> wrote:

>While I think I understand your sentiment and might actually go so far
>as to say that Don is what I would term a "close-minded believer," I
>would like to hope that there is still an opportunity to help him see
>that God has allowed, and indeed created, other realities in the world
>besides his own.

If there is a God, there is but one reality. We can aspire to it,
we can reject it, but there is but one. I apsire to know it.

The accusation of closed-mindedness is always a dead giveaway that
someone cannot respond to a point you have made. When someone
calls me "closed-minded", let alone "blinkered" I know they are
desperate and have little to say of substance.
Any knowledge of truth will appear closed-minded to someone who
does not have that knowledge. Physicists tend to be closed-minded
about gravity. Electricians tend to be closed-minded about the electrical
code, and so forth. Jesus made truth claims. He cannot be another
good and kind teacher. As C.S. Lewis has said, he is either a raving
lunatic, an evil schemer, or exactly who he said he was. I believe he is
who he said he was. If that is so, "open-mindedness" about that
conclusion is foolishness not intelligence. Calling me "closed-minded"
simply means you cannot make your case, so Thad does not anger me
with his insults.

>It is obvious to me that his reality works for him, as
>much as it may not work for others, and vice vers
Re: Antress plugins (was...) [message #79249 is a reply to message #79247] Mon, 29 January 2007 23:40 Go to previous messageGo to next message
TCB is currently offline  TCB
Messages: 1261
Registered: July 2007
Senior Member
like such a repulsive first world cracker.

Now then, I'm a realist and there are plenty of assholes in this country
too and I'm sure somewhere there are nut job buddhist fundies oppressing
someone or another for some stupid reason. But in aggregate I have been slowly
overwhelmed by the generosity, quality, and simple morality of Thais. I mean,
I'll be at a club, talk to the DJ about how much I like a song, and he'll
try to give me the CD. Granted, he probably has it burned somewhere else,
but it's not offered for sale but just offered as a gift to a near stranger.
It's just the way they are. In any case, I will be learning a great deal
more about their country and religion when I get back, they're definitely
on to something.

The other thing I'm going to do is see what, if anything, is being done to
get these AIDS patients medicine. I was talking to my waitress friend and
was shocked at how sick people looked. AIDS isn't nearly the death sentence
it used to be, as a doctor friend of mine said recently, he'd rather get
AIDS than Hepatitis C. So I asked why these people were so sick and it's
just a matter of money. The US government won't let developing nations make
the medicines on their own and almost nobody can afford the treatment. So
they go and waste away in the woods. I'm lucky enough to know a lot or really
rich people and if I can do something to get some money directly to the place
she visited maybe that's a small payback for the exquisite hospitality this
country has shown me.

TCB

Doug Wellington <doug@parisfaqs.com> wrote:
>TCB wrote:
>> Well, Don, one doesn't need to be Sigmund effin Freud
>
>Eeek! Damn it man! Now I have to clean the milk and cookie chips off
>my monitor! (and out of my nose!) :-)
>
>> All of which is far too subtle for a blinkered mind such as your own.
>
>While I think I understand your sentiment and might actually go so far
>as to say that Don is what I would term a "close-minded believer," I
>would like to hope that there is still an opportunity to help him see
>that God has allowed, and indeed created, other realities in the world
>besides his own. It is obvious to me that his reality works for him, as

>much as it may not work for others, and vice versa, but clubbing him on

>the head isn't going to change his attitude, but merely make him retreat

>deeper into that reality, building further artificial distinctions
>between his chosen group and others...
>
>> P.S. While my hatred of the stateside twice born remains intact,
>
>While it is easy to see a stereotype of Bush-loving, NASCAR-watching,
>Support-our-solders, WWE-fan, pickup-truck-driving, Wal-Mart shopping,
>born-again, self-righteous, judgmental, evangelical fundamentalists, not

>ALL of them are mindless sheep who lack spirituality...
>
>> my suspicion of spirituality in general has been shaken by this
>> trip to Thailand.
>
>Thailand seems to be a magnificent place. Many people in my martial
>arts and oriental medicine school have traveled there to study, and I
>hope to join them on a future trip.
>
>> The country is over 90% Buddhist and their spirituality
>> in the face of very real hardships is inspiring.
>
>I find true spirituality of any kind to be inspiring. While I myself
>have chosen a Zen Buddhist path, my teacher is not only a Roshi, but
>also a Catholic Priest, and someone I greatly admire.
>
>> I remain an atheist and make no pretensions to Buddhism, but having
>> seen how their piety brings out the noble traits of charity and
>> understanding I can no longer dismiss all religion out of hand.
>
>Would it seem odd if I said to you that you can be atheist and Buddhist

>at the same time?
>
>Doug"DC" <dc@spammersinhell.co
Re: Chinese knock off plugins [message #79256 is a reply to message #79225] Tue, 30 January 2007 05:10 Go to previous message
John [1] is currently offline  John [1]
Messages: 2229
Registered: September 2005
Senior Member
>
>>>
>

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