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Archived from groups: rec.audio.pro (More info?)
Roger W. Norman wrote:
> Certainly I can see AM in Samplitude as a DX plug. I haven't looked a
> Nuendo yet (wonder why I have it installed) nor Audition or N-Track, but I
> never use any of those anyway.
What I've now found is that if you already have the DX plug
when you install S.F. 5.0 (I'm still on Win98SE) it removes
it from the registry and makes it unavailable to other apps.
If you then try to re-install the DX plug, it takes the
place of what's in 5.0 and you lose the 32 bit capability.
It's beyond annoying for them to rescind a prior purchase
like that.
>
> Like I said, the convolution reverb in ver 7 of Samplitude makes AM a
> complete unnecessary product for me. But I liked it when I used it, and I
> don't record stereo tracks to a single track setup, so using two instances
> may eat lots of clocks, but I can do what I liked with it.
My need for A.M. is not for convolution but for what they
call "Recover" (de-convolution), the measurement and
characterization of speaker and microphone impulse responses.
Bob
--
"Things should be described as simply as possible, but no
simpler."
A. Einstein
Roger W. Norman wrote:
> Certainly I can see AM in Samplitude as a DX plug. I haven't looked a
> Nuendo yet (wonder why I have it installed) nor Audition or N-Track, but I
> never use any of those anyway.
What I've now found is that if you already have the DX plug
when you install S.F. 5.0 (I'm still on Win98SE) it removes
it from the registry and makes it unavailable to other apps.
If you then try to re-install the DX plug, it takes the
place of what's in 5.0 and you lose the 32 bit capability.
It's beyond annoying for them to rescind a prior purchase
like that.
>
> Like I said, the convolution reverb in ver 7 of Samplitude makes AM a
> complete unnecessary product for me. But I liked it when I used it, and I
> don't record stereo tracks to a single track setup, so using two instances
> may eat lots of clocks, but I can do what I liked with it.
My need for A.M. is not for convolution but for what they
call "Recover" (de-convolution), the measurement and
characterization of speaker and microphone impulse responses.
Bob
--
"Things should be described as simply as possible, but no
simpler."
A. Einstein