pranza wrote: Tue Jul 04, 2023 4:16 am
PCI to whatever bridges are not a problem these days... maybe it would be possible to make an usb-c (it has pcie lanes, right) to PCI extension contraptions with Pericom chips on them and just continue making and selling those old style PCI cards... xite prices are a bit prohibitive, there is no 'entry' point to warm new people up and get them into Scope.
Well, I´ve read your posts and understand,- you don´t own a XITE-1 or XITE-1D,- correct ?
If yes,- YOU have to accept that the Sonic Core hardware product IS XITE,- period.
As an owner of a PCI card system, praise Sonic Core you still get support and are able to use w/ computers running Win XP up to Win 11.
You also have to accept PCI DSP hardware from 90´s, related application and in the past coded DSP devices using the host computers processor partially as a co-processor and it´s RAM (some do !), still run best on a 32Bit WinXP-Win7 system.
In addition you have to understand such SCOPE system is TRUE realtime processing and will NEVER run perfect w/ any PCI to PCIe extension device.
Many users tried already and got more or less mediocre results,- and GaryB repeated himself for several times on this.
So, when you don´t want to sell your PCI card based SCOPE system, don´t want to buy a XITE-1 (or cannot afford),- the very best way to run your SCOPE system
IS an older machine running WinXP or Win 7 !
SCOPE DSP devices simply don´t care about 32 or 64Bit,- they sound the same on both systems.
What has to be updated all the time to be on par w/ the Windows versions is partially the SCOPE application and the ASIO driver.
WHEN you run SCOPE standalone on a dedicated machine,- you don´t need the ASIO driver at all, but it will be installed always.
To get rid off, you simply don´t place any ASIO modules in your projects and you´re fine.
You´re able to record any real musical instrument via SCOPE and VDAT,- all hardware electronic keyboards, MIDI modules, electric- and acoustic guitars and bass, organs, electromagnetic and acoustic pianos, drums and vocals,- just like working w/ tape,- and VDAT recordings sound good.
You have the GUI of an ADAT recorder (a device I never used !),- but VDAT is a TRUE direct to disc 32Bit integer recording device w/ no ASIO driver in between which is an advantage !
For me, it´s also welcome for digitizing my tapes recorded w/ my Fostex-R8 reel-to-reel MTR,- and I can play and don´t need all the feature bloated sequencer/editor crap urgently.
Sometimes I wonder why I bought all the DAW apps ´cause I possibly use a very few % of their features only.
With stock SCOPE 5(.1), you already got a s##tload of devices and modular modules which were optional in SCOPE 4 times.
They all sound good and work almost perfect when using a dedicated SCOPE host computer.
A Intel Pentium Dual Core D945D processor still runs in my WinXP 32Bit rackmount DAW machine and it´s already kind of overkill for SCOPE 5.1 32Bit "standalone".
It´s an advantage WinXP is an OS still and not a service like Win10 and Win11.
Win 7 is somewhere in between, but a good choice too.
I also run SCOPE 7 32Bit on a HP server w/ Win7 Pro SP1 installed.
Advantage w/ WinXP and Win7,- you can forget Windows updates (and SCOPE didn´t need ´em anyway)
And yes, I do want the STS sampler working,- and it works in 32Bit systems.
You know,- when I look at my hardware samplers from the past,- 4 AKAI, 1 EMU and 2 Oberheim DPX-1,- and related SCSI drives (HDD, MO and Syquest),- all consuming power and occupie 30+ HU in racks,- I´m happy to be able to use my AKAI library on STS samplers running in SCOPE, sounding almost identical and only need a single midi-tower or 4HU rackmount case.
I converted EMU and AKAI libraries for "modern" sample players/samplers,- 1st was Steinberg Halion and then NI Kontakt using CD-xtract application which also converts to many other formats, .sts included,- and the results for Halion and Kontakt were mediocre, required lots of post editing and optimizations to make it only slightly better.
Don´t forget, most sample players/samplers are products designed for selling "soundpacks", which is a lot of income for leading software manufacturers.
And NO,- I don´t need all their soundpacks at all.
I know because I´m a NI Komplete Ultimate Collectors Edition user since I made the mistake buying at a discount.
I had to learn,- to fully use all their soundpacks, I better buy their hardware device "Maschine" in addition,- but I didn´t.
And some of their sampled guitar libraried doesn´t allow to be played on keys like I want,- instead these are simply switches triggering pre-programmed chords and patterns and I´m unable to play any single line, solo-runs or riffs like I want.
Last but no least,- it´s true there were and are still bugs in SCOPE up to the latest version and these should be fixed if possible but ...
when you´re not satisfied w/ SCOPE and how it runs in general on your PCI DSP hardware inside YOUR DAW host computer and how YOU use it for the time being,- you still have several options:
1.)
using 2 machines,- 1 for SCOPE and the other for native,- side-by-side and connected via ADAT and MIDI
2.)
sell your SCOPE gear and look elsewhere ...
3.)
be patient and wait for SCOPE 8,- ASIO driver has priority a.t.m.
4.)
in the meantime save for XITE and buy one together w/ SCOPE 8 once the software is been tested on your PCI card SCOPE system.
(you might sell your SCOPE PCI after you bought XITE-1 and do a key-transfer from PCI the XITE for optional and 3rd party devices)
5.)
Be more patient and wait for Sonic Core "Joana"
viewtopic.php?t=37387,- just because
I guess it
might do what you want,- using "Joana" as the "soundcard" and run plugins (DSP devices) in your prefered native DAW application running on a Windows, MacOS or LInux machine.
Similar to former XTC mode,- so to say ...
You can type endles complaints here, but they won´t speed up anything.
Because this is not a Sonic Core support forum, they don´t read all the posts here.
Small company, not much staff,- so too time consuming.
´n uff said ...
Bud