T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2733.1 | I didn't know I cared | EZ2GET::STEWART | Fight fire with marshmallows! | Tue May 18 1993 09:03 | 17 |
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I hate their product release strategy - the example that comes to mind
is the quick succession of the X-11 foot pedal by the X-15. Maybe they
were just testing the waters for MIDI foot controllers when they issued
the X-11, but I had to add my own foot-pedal-continuous-controller
thing - and then the X-15 hits the market... *8'(
BTW, the graphics suck, too! I'd rather pull a nice black box out with
some simple, elegant line graphics on it, with space for taped on
labels. For the ads, and the compulsively neat, they could package
some pre-printed sticky labels with the unit.
Tell them that MIDI gear is too flexible to be stuck with pre-printed
labels. Tell 'em that some of us use their foot pedals on carpet, so
we need footswitches that aren't so darn stiff.
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2733.2 | | TECRUS::ROST | I need air freshener under the drums | Tue May 18 1993 09:33 | 10 |
| You can also say that while some people appreciate "bang for the buck"
that the two things that bug me about ART is they trade off features
against audio quality...they just don't sound as *good* as some other
brands (notably Lexicon and Yamaha, both of whom are higher priced for
similar functionality), and the reliability of the units doesn't seem
to be very high. I'd rather have a unit that can do two or three
things very well for a long time instead of one that does a dozen
things only fair, and has to go into the shop twice a year.
Brian
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2733.3 | Build a better mousetrap | SUBSYS::GODIN | | Wed May 19 1993 08:49 | 36 |
| (Ramble warning ?)
A friend of mine has the ART "Starimaster" model MIDI foot controller
with 14 buttons & 2 pedals. I don't know the model number, but it seems to do
everything one could ever want in a MIDI controller. He had some problem
getting it to talk to his Alesis Quadraverb+, but that turned out to be mostly
that he was too lazy to renumber all the channels. Apparently one of the units
goes from 00 to 99 while the other goes from 01 to (1)00, so unless you
reassign all the numbers, you have to live with a skew. I think he decided to
live with it. I would have too ... for about 20 minutes ! Anyway, the QV+ is
pretty popular & I don't know if there are any "standards " about such things,
but someone should decide what the most suitable default settings are & then
everyone should adhere to that system as much as possible. This is probably a
nit.
Anyway, if ART is planning "professional" product entries, they should do
some serious engineering work first. Quality specs on things like headroom,
noise level, dynamic range, THD, reliability, & documentation are not only
desirable, but necessary when it comes to pro gear. Most of what is needed to
achieve better grades in these areas is simply a matter of design for quality
rather than design for cost. Once it's discovered that using a certain type of
component versus another improves the quality significantly, then the better
component should be used.
This goes for manufacturing processes as well. There's a world of
difference between what is passible for a rack mount unit that does 101 things
& is affordable for any garage band & a high quality piece of studio gear that
will be selected on the basis of its performance in a low noise commercial
(digital mastering etc.) environment. A big slice of this difference is the
way these things are put together & the components used. Often this is a
relatively low priority of gadget manufacturers.
IMHO, the objective of a company like ART in entering the "pro" sound
arena, should be to build a reputation of producing the best sounding, most
reliable units possible, while increasing its customer base. This canNOT be
done with hype, & it doesn't matter how popular their low to mid grade stuff
is.
BTW, I'd vote for those stickers as well.
Paul
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2733.4 | | HEDRON::DAVEB | just 'cuz you own the land, there's no unique hand floods the dam | Wed May 19 1993 08:55 | 7 |
| If I had to criticise ART it would be headroom, their gear has a serious lack
of it. Soundwise the newer stuff is comparable to Alesis, but then alesis
hasn't added anything really new to their multi-effects gear in years, and it's
bordering on obsolete. And yes I do know about the Quad GT (bleech on the
distortions).
dbii
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2733.5 | | KDX200::COOPER | Let The Light Surround You!! | Wed May 19 1993 12:48 | 35 |
| > A friend of mine has the ART "Starimaster" model MIDI foot controller
>with 14 buttons & 2 pedals. I don't know the model number, but it seems to do
>everything one could ever want in a MIDI controller.
Umm, thats an ART UltraFoot X-15.
> He had some problem
>getting it to talk to his Alesis Quadraverb+, but that turned out to be mostly
>that he was too lazy to renumber all the channels. Apparently one of the units
>goes from 00 to 99 while the other goes from 01 to (1)00, so unless you
>reassign all the numbers, you have to live with a skew. I think he decided to
>live with it. I would have too ... for about 20 minutes !
Correct - Alesis has memory locations from 00-99, and ART has 01-128.
I don't see that it makes much of difference though, as both units
will map to any number you want, and the foot controller allows you
to number the buttons any way you want too. With my TriAxis/QuadraVerb
set up, I just need to remember that button "1" send path change to
the triaxis for path 01, and path 00 for the Quadraverb. It doesn't
make a difference to me, as I never look at the rack anyway. When
it comes to brass tacks tho, the ALESIS unit is the 'non-standard'
one - not the ART pedal. Most stuff that I've had starts at location
01
My opinion on ART gear isn't very promising. They tend to dazzle you
with glossies on how the unit will do everything under the sun, look
sharp (yeah, I like the graphics :-), and generally seems to good to
be true. IMHO, it IS too good to be true. While ART gear tends to
allow you to have zillions of options, sound wise, it doesn't do any
*one thing* well...Other than the UltraFoot controller, which I really
like... I had an SGE that I hated, and I spent some time with the
SGX2000 also. Bleck. They've got a long way to go before I buy any
of their stuff for MY studio...
jc - With his two cents worth of MIDI Rack Puke commentary
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2733.6 | 53 channels & nothin' on | SUBSYS::GODIN | | Fri May 28 1993 15:19 | 6 |
| RE: "MIDI rack puke"
It seems as if it's becoming increasingly difficult to avoid becoming a
MIDI rack puke these days. (Unless you're playing blues.) There are
*folk*singers that are MIDI rack pukes !
Paul
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