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August 18, 2008

Keeping track of your product keys with Gmail


For some reason software companies these days have it in their heads that if they attempt to lock down their software with ridiculous software activation rituals, keys, codes and dongles, they will be able to keep the pirates from using their software for free. The fact of the matter is that no matter how many times they move the pea in their silly little game of piracy cups, their software will always get hacked. All the while people that actually support these companies by buying the software get to jump through these silly hoops they have set up. So if you find yourself becoming majorly confused and disorganized when trying to keep up with all your product activation keys/conformation codes/serial numbers/response codes, etc... here is a tip from Lifehacker that you should check out. You will get a good idea of how to search through Gmail and set up filters to find and keep track of your exhausting array of activation codes. If they never emailed you the codes, just open up whatever activation program you have and email yourself whatever numbers you need, or even a screenshot.

You do use Gmail...don't you?

August 14, 2008

Prodikeys PC-MIDI


My buddy Stumbled me a link to the Creative Prodikeys website. They were hocking this keyboard for $21 shipped so I jumped on it. I though even if the thing is totally unusable, I am only out twenty bucks. So I gave it a shot..
More after the jump.

Continue reading "Prodikeys PC-MIDI" »

August 7, 2008

Make your singer sound like a choir


I found
this awesome tutorial at Audiotuts.com about making one vocal sound like many with Clone Ensemble in Cubase. You all know how I do love Cubase. Personally I would also take the original vocal and twist it up with Melodyne, but this is great for getting the quick and dirty done.

Multiple DAWs, one set of plugins


Have you ever tried out a new DAW and tried to set your /steinberg/plugins/ folder as the plugins folder. Then I am sure you are aquantied with the nice dialog boxes that tell you over and over of the multitude of plugins that are not compatible or even the dreaded freeze. Here is a tip, use shortcuts. Make a separate folder for Ableton Live, or whatever program you are setting up, and put a shortcut file for all your compatible VSTs in that folder. Basically all you have to do is go into your /steinberg/plugins/ folder and highlight all the 3rd party plugins that you are pretty sure will work with the new DAW. Then, while they are all still highlighted, right click and select Create Shortcut (mac guys use aliases). Drag all your new shortcut files into your new plugin folder and you are all set. The beauty of this is you can have all your plugins in one spot and several other places as well, and you can have several different plugin folders for whatever apps you may have.

Nocturn Review


So I did a meta-review a while back over the Novation Nocturn. Well, I have had mine for a month now and I feel confident that I can give it a decent review now.
I will start at the beginning with the install. It comes with a quick start card and a install disk, no manual. The manual is in PDF form on the disk. I see more and more companies doing this lately and I have to say that I am not a fan of PDF manuals. Even though I have a dual monitor setup, it is still hard to flip through a PDF the way you would a physical manual and still have the program up to tinker with. But lets just take this as a sign that the setup is so intuitive that you need nothing other than a quick setup, with Cubase SX3, which I use, this is actually the case. You go through the setup...next next next...until you get to the plugin manager. You drag the plugins you want to control over and off you go.
Starting up Cubase I realize that the Automap 2.0 program has made a copy of all my plugins and appended (automap) to the new version. This means that in all my old sessions I will have to go in and save the current state to a preset and unload the plugin, load the automap version and load the preset.
Wait...Viva Las Vegas just came on, gotta sing it to my girl...blame it on the scotch.
Ok, back to work. So to play with my new toy I had to start a new session, no prob. Load up some D'n'B breaks and a bass synth, kick up a loop and get to tweaking. Here is where this thing starts to shine. I loaded Glitch on the drum loop track and hit the "FX" button. This brings up the Automap GUI, and shows all the insert plugins applied over the knobs. You simply touch the knob that corresponds to the plugin you want to control and it shows you all the controls of that plugin mapped out across the virtual nocturn of the GUI with page up and down buttons to scroll through the multitude of parameters that you can tweak with the knobs. By just grabbing a few knobs I can now get some nice Justice/Daft Punk type grooves, so easy. Very nice, but not really my style. Actually it kinda takes the coolness out of music like that.
So now I hit the mixer button and the nocturn takes control of Cubases mixer, Awesome! CRASH!!!! Shit! Restart, reload. Over the next few weeks I get the same thing over and over, crashing. Automap is as stable as my faith in the government...and I am an anarchist. The Nocturn has afforded me an amazing amount of control over my plugins and synths. It makes them feel organic and real, I can easily manipulate everything almost as quickly as if they were physical units sitting on my desk. But I will be damned if I would trust this thing on stage. I would be surprised if you could make it though a set without it taking a shit. In fact last night I had to uninstall, clean the registry and reinstall just to get Automap to start without making the whole system instantly bomb out. This is more than a little glitch, we are talking catastrophic failure if you are on stage. Not to mention that when it is working, Automap seems to make all your plugins take up more cpu than normal, but only when tweaking the knobs. My workflow at home is much improved by my nocturn but it seems offset by the totally unpredictable crashing. Hopefully when Novation updates its Automap 2.0 software they will have worked out some of the bugs therein. Oh and if you were hopeing to use this with Ableton Live, well you are going to have to set everything up manually with midi CC. Don't you wish you had a "real" manual now?

Overall I would still say the Nocturn is cool. I would not however give it the 10/10 rating that Computer Music Magazine did. There is a lot I was left wanting, but it still beats the pants off of manually programing the knobs of my axiom in Cubase. However, if Live is your thing I would not recommend the Nocturn. Since Live has that niffty midi mapping feature, it kinda renders the whole Automap 2.0 program useless. And if you want to use it for your DJ software...forget it. They don't support any DJ software. I don't even know why they bothered to put a cross fader on the thing since it never maps to anything automatically.

Do I sound bitter? Maybe just a bit. I guess it was all the hype that got my hopes up. The Nocturn has a lot of potential, if it could only kick the crash habbit and pick up a few more friends, namely Ableton Live and some DJ software. Oh well, heres hoping to some quick updates.

April 27, 2008

Nocturn metareview


I am a big fan of the UK magazine Computer Music. It cost me about $20 per magazine but I still find myself buying every one because it is so useful and informative. They recently did a review of a new midi/usb interface for audio apps from Novation called Nocturn. I don't recall ever seeing a product receive a perfect score from these guys before, but the Nocturn did. I must say, I am freaking stoked about this thing. Anyone who has tried to get a midi controllers knobs to play nice with a program like Cubase SX or Protools will testify that it can not only be an excercise in futility, it can kill your creative flow instantly. Not to mention how fucked you are if the program of your choice decides to forget your settings when you are about to go to play live.
Well, Novation has apparently got a handle on their Automaping technology because it has the reviewers at CM doing back flips over how easy and intuitive it is to use. Anything that makes them happy makes me happy. Read the review here.

Oh and did I mention that it is cheap! Only $150 bucks for all the touch sensitive, super intuitive fast mapping glory. I am gonna go get one next week, will update with a real review.