BTW: Faust looks interesting, but its website is currently a stub with e.g. no downloads. However, its SourceForge page is up. On the down side, I don't think it supports VST3 without a third-party hack. On the up side, it is one of the few that supports Linux plugins.FWIW: JUCE charges a lot for a commercial license for just one plugin, and more yet for a license for 2+ commercial plugins. It would work fine if the plug is just for you, or is non-profit. It is one of the few mentioned here that supports AAX and RTAS.
Nice article. I have been running PipeWire for about 2 months on ArchLinux and had no issues so far. I have in fact jumped from ALSA directly to PipeWire. Yes, I had to do some ugly hacks to avoid installing PulseAudio, like running some applications using apulse (PulseAudio Emulation for ALSA), fortunately that problem is gone.
HACK Audio.Apps.[D].Plugins.VSTi
Download: https://miimms.com/2vFLeV
Hey Matt... I am just wondering if you'll be lifting the 64 LFO limit... I was able to hack a save file and allow an LFO of 5 bars... I've been trying to study the coding in the save file and change things up... For the most part, I broke some limits... but I can't seem to get passed the 64 LFO limit... I really like to stretch the limit so I could really reproduce lots of NES songs accurately... anyway... thanks. ?
I gave this initial release a review: -WWBDmEqsCovering:- Installation- Play Engine- Sounds- Using time-tested hacks for improved playback rendering- Concerns and recommendations
Claudio Santos is a sound editor and spatial audio mixer at Silver Sound. Slightly too interested in technology and workflow hacks, he spends most of his waking hours tweaking, fiddling and tinkering away on his computer. 2ff7e9595c
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