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#124353 - 05/08/02 08:22 PM
Re: USB Interface for PSR 9000
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Member
Registered: 11/15/01
Posts: 89
Loc: Sydney, Australia
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Dennis and Ulrich, Thanks very much for your feed-back. It certainly sounds like a great product. When I wrote my initial post I am sorry that I did not express myself very clearly. What I meant to say was that if I am using the keyboard (interface) and looking to upload a file from the hard disk, normally if I have a SCSI hd connected as well I can see the FD, HD and SCSI disks. I can then select which disk I want. If the USB is working and my computer is on, then looking from the Keyboard interface do I see the computer's HD as well as the FD, HD and SCSI disks? The USB's manual that I read seemed to be a little vague on this. It gave me the impression that looking from the Keyboard interface, I would only see either the HD or the USB's attached Computers's HD, not both together. SO if this was so, what would be the switching mechanism between the two? In consideration of your comments, this question may only be accademic, because no one would normally operate (during live performance) in this fashion. Having "talked" it through with you, I don't believe it is a critical issue for me now anyway. But I would still welcome your comments. Regards, Jon.
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#124356 - 05/14/02 10:35 AM
Re: USB Interface for PSR 9000
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Member
Registered: 08/27/99
Posts: 152
Loc: Berkeley, CA
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The USB board is becoming more and more popular with users at our PSR Groups. It is particularly useful now that one of our members has writting us an "automatic styles sorting program". It allowed machine sorting of ~75% of my 30,000+ styles collection and easily found duplicates, even where only the name of the style had been changed!
Using this program with the USB interface should make organizing and loading my HD on my new PSR-9000 a breeze.
Bob Gelman
PS:
We received this unsolicited the other day:
Hi Group,
This is not a paid testimonial, but I am ecstatic with the Musitronics USB interface card which arrived yesterday from Germany and is finally working tonight. It turns the 9000 Pro keyboard into a totally new tool, an actual work station, the one Yamaha should have marketed but did not.
From the screen of either of my two desktop computers, or a laptop, I can cut, paste, edit, name or rename, delete, rearrange files, shuffle folders, defragment the hard disk...you name it. Effortlessly. All of this is next to impossible, using the 9000's LCD screen and the prehistoric Yamaha software, confusing buttons and messages, and incomprehensible owner's manual. But with the interface, the 9000's disk is just one more (actually four more drives) on my network. I can even play MIDI's directly from the keyboard's disk, through the USB cable, and through either computer's Soundblaster Live! card, via any sound bank I choose, and out through my sound system. As with any disk under windows, you can check its properties and see, graphically, how much space has been used.
You can download MIDI's, .WAV samples, styles, anything directly from the internet to the 9000's hard disk. And of course you can export your works the same way. My 9000 is now a whole new ball game. Managing its hard disk is now simple, friendly, and uses standard Windows displays on your PC.
At the beginning, I said I had "finally" gotten the interface working. After installation yesterday, all was well until I tried to connect it to a computer for final configuration. At the end of the process, it would cause either computer to crash; blue screen, lockup, chaos. I sent a late (Saturday) night E-mail to Oliver Schwarz of Musitronics, describing the problem and suggesting that he not spend any time on it until after the weekend. (After all, today was even Mother's Day.)
Well, I don't think Oliver ever sleeps. Early this morning, I had a reply, asking for more information. During the day, we exchanged a number of E-mails to narrow it, deciding early that the problem most likely involved software drivers, and not Musitronics' hardware. Oliver kept at it, always answering before I expected a response. We narrowed it to a conflict with a probable faulty Adaptec virtual device driver, related to "Easy CD Creator". Oliver found a newer one, E-mailed it to me, I set it up, and the problem disappeared. I could not be more appreciative of this man's help, far beyond what I have experienced with any American software or hardware supplier in recent years. With most, once you have paid for the product, you are on your own; if your Windows operating system doesn't work very well, Bill Gates would like to sell you a new one...again and again.
I imagine this is not news to those of you who have already dealt with Musitronics, but it was very refreshing to me.
Anyway, I wanted to share this with those of you who may be tottering on the brink of deciding whether to order the USB interface. Jump!
But note that there was a delay of some weeks before receiving the board, because of a surge in orders from folks who had apparently also read good things in a keyboard magazine.
Now, I think I'll go into the kitchen and find a way to celebrate.
Phil
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