![]() ![]() If the iPad control interface supports multi-touch, Bidule will certainly respond to it. An iPad with your favorite MIDI or OSC control interface, mapped to your Bidule layout, will make you fall in love with Bidule all over again. If that were possible, I believe we'd all be talking on the Bidule iOS site, and not the Audiobus site My point is, I don't think the Bidule paradigm for handling audio processing apps (VSTs or AUs in the PC world) works in iOS. Beyond processing power, there's the question of how to integrate "apps" into the Bidule layout paradigm. I've seen him reject the idea in the past, so it'll be interesting to see if he responds to the question now. I don't think it's quite as bad as your last sentence up there (re: not enough CPU power on an iPad) but it's certainly much more limited than a typical computer (lap, desk, whatever-top) and I suspect that Seb would never be able to port all of Bidule to iOS. Needless to say, is there anyone who can help me out here? Let's get random! Or maybe there's a hiddem gem in the appstore I completely overlooked. Maybe I have this complex limited-only-by-processor-and-ram synthesis environment already on my iPad, don't even know it, and need someone to point out the obvious. Then it's Audioshare->Reverb->Cubasis (which will be my main audio arranger). If this app is NOT ab compatible, it should at least have a built-in recorder and audiocopy. Did I forget panpot automation for the split signals in that chain somewhere and for loud/soft dynamics? This would create the underpinning of a new 30-40 minute soundscape I can improvise other good stuff on top of and automatically created via automation. Plogue has released a new version of Bidule - v0.7, which is the first version that you can actually buy (if you want to - a public beta version that expires in 3 months is also available as usual). These are to be fed into a reverb unit (whether a part of the app itself or that can be fed into one of the AB reverb units). ![]() I'd also split the outgoing signal into two and feed both into their respective band pass filters, one cutoff modulated by a slower standard sine lfo, and the other by a faster lfo. This lfo signal would have its output signal limited so only those signals within a certain threshold trigger the bursts. ![]() I want to have random short noise bursts, and the way I'd like to achieve this is have a sample and hold modulate a noise generator as a sort of lfo triggering the noise burst amp envelope. I'm looking for the "plogue bidule" of the iPad basically. Now, puredata confuses the hell out of me, so I'm not looking to learn a programming language. That four-track recorder with "tape editing" abilities is SWEET! I'm getting deep into Stockhausen and John Cage and paving my own way into making "chance music" and sick audio manipulation that Skrillex wishes he was deep into making. See, half of my ideas still consist of fun, cheeky melodies and lyrics, but lately a new form of self-expression has been welling up inside of me ever since I got Nave (wavetable synthesis that's easy to perform atonal riffs off of). 6.Navigate to “plg_key_215790.bin” 7.Wanted: I'm looking for a synthesis environment that can go deep without being too confusing on the iPad. Open Bidule stand alone and select register from the help menu. copy VSTi to Library/Audio/Plugins/Vst 5. copy AU to Library/Audio/Plugins/Components 3. The new paradigm of computer audio can be summed up in two words: “real-time” and “modular” – both of which are embodied by one application… install notes: 1. As he performs, a musician decides to add an LFO to a synth’s filter cutoff knob, where no LFO existed before. It gets better: A sound is broken down into 256 individual bands, then each is tweaked one at a time in a unique way. Old hat, right? Now, imagine this: the same single output socket sprouting no less than eight different cables connecting eight different effects. Elsewhere, a MIDI cable links a MIDI input to a synthesizer, which is in turn connected to a mixer. More cables connect the effect to a mixer. Is this a familiar picture? Cables lead from a microphone input into a small digital effect. Bidule is used by thousands of musicians worldwide Bidulists from the all over the world have gathered on the forums at the Plogue Web site to get their questions about Bidule answered, as well as share their music and Bidule inventions. Plogue Bidule 0.9728 Standalone AU VST VSTi | 65 MB The brainchild of Plogue Art et Technologie is a cross-platform application that is gaining recognition world-wide as the new standard in modular music software. ![]()
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