![]() ![]() I have tried looking for the buffer settings but cannot find them and I have reinstalled the app but the problem is still there. – Full multitouch on iPadOS: Turn on performance mode and interact with multiple controls at once.Audulus 3 has been updated to v3.3 but I am having problems with CPU overload and audio breaking up when opening some factory preset patches like Arranger, Bassic Sequencer and BootStrap on my iPad Pro running iOS 10.0.2. – New UI nodes like sliders and X-Y pads. – Modules can now be recursively exposed. Build front-panels out of other front panels. – Improved search experience in the module browser. – You can pinch to zoom while dragging a connection or moving a module. – AUv3 versions on both iPadOS and macOS. – Canvas Node: Build custom user interfaces using the Lua programming language. – GLSL Shader node: Make advanced shadertoy-style graphics. Well, that explains what they’ve been up to. ![]() If you just want to play around with it, there’s also now a free version with the ability to run community-generated patches: “The user interface is now more pro while still being immediate and approachable.” “Audulus 4 represents a massive step forward for Audulus, which required a tremendous re-working of the code,” Audulus developer Taylor Holliday says in a statement. □️□️ #Audulus4 is now available FOR FREE on the Mac and iOS stores. You can open and use patches that people share online. It’s then US$19.99 thereafter, but that buys you both desktop and mobile versions in a single license – nice! Try it out and remember to give us five stars and a review! /Aczzca9ZdY- Audulus Decem$19.99 for a Universal Mac & iOS license to edit and create patches. Of course, those of us modular lovers just can’t get enough. And that seems to be the way the creator feels. ![]() This is a labor of love by someone named stschoen on the very active Audulus forum. (It’s a free download there.) They appear to be wearing a Stetson hat, too – power flex. And they were inspired by the excellent Software version of the excellent Buchla 259e which was inspired byt he original Buchla 259, so like I said – the more, the merrier. We’re talking the heart of West Coast synthesis here – the “complex” oscillator is basically a single multifunctional oscillator with gobs of modulation to make beautifully messy waveforms with lots of harmonic complexity to please the ears.Īnd it’s a loose version, not an exact recreation – one that feels at home in the Audulus environment, with its own personality. This was inspired by Softube Modular’s virtual recreation of the Buchla 259e Twisted Waveform Generator. The original 259e hardware was a digital version of the all analog Buchla 259 Complex Waveform Generator and was wavetable based. Since Audulus doesn’t lend itself well to wavetable synthesis I decided to take a blended approach. This is not an attempt to clone either Buchla unit, but a complex oscillator in the same general style.Drambo is hands down the easiest/fastest modular workflow on IOS. It's fresh out so it's getting a lot of attention, and great roadmap for updates and improvements. Plenty of maths, several sampler modules. Granular is on the roadmap, but not yet available. Handles polyphony better than any other IOS modular. MiRack is closest to a hardware euroack workflow. Got lot's of real world modules like the Mutable Instruments catalogue. There may be some granular modules - I don't know if it's got Clouds yet. Spectral is quite niche, Izotope and apeSoft specialize with it, but even on desktop there's not a great deal of spectral effects. ![]()
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