its enough when it acts like one.. still can need the energy of the user.. that wouldnt be a flawdavepermen wrote:okay, there you could maybe help. but it's hard to satisfy user expectations there, as, as you say, they expect perpetuum mobilees. which, as you know, can't exist.3phase wrote: no no..just about sequencers work and how improvisation with sequencers works..especially under the unideal stage situation...
its rather user interface design... these nerds are too trained to do work after a list.. so when they do musicsoftware it allmost is inevitable that this turns out to be closer related to a spreadsheet calculation than to a perpetum mobilee.
i personally don't see how they should care to support such old hw that no vendor has support for anymore anyways. it's a nice to have, but not really the main focus they should have. your view is different, based on having too much old stuff to rely on, obviously.
thats not the point.. there was an evolution in live sequencing.. and ignoring that just means to repeat mistakes of the past and reinvent good stuff decades later.. we still have only linar sequencing in live.. the 80´s sequencing style was interacting .. nonelinear ..conditional sequencing.. ..in ways with smaler memorys more complex than one can do with live.. ok..with mfl that has changed.. but since this will reach the user it will be 4 decades after the invention of this type of sequencing
there is a nice video about robert henke explainig his way of doing life sets.. with his fancy controler.. in the beginning he states that he wasnt sure wether having 5 or a rows..... he decided for 5 because HIS tracks never have more than 5 scenes..
later he tells that he latly discovers thats fun not to work in scenes thats nice to just click a clip and try..
a little contradiction..
i was laughing.. the inventor of the software a decade later finaly getting to that point.. just wasnt his way of working before..
if the apc would have been developed at a later point it probably would have had more than 5 rows...
Thats the main difference between improvising and a ready composed set.. you dont need much buttons for a ready composed set.. as soon it gets to improvisation the user interface design gets much more demanding..
thats the main reason wy a guitar dont looks like a spreadsheet calculation
GAFM ***