I sent an email off to Korg Italy yesterday regarding two things:
First, the time it takes to load a set from a jump drive via the 2.0 USB port and the wording they've choosen to use to label these USB ports.
I received two replys today from my good friend at Korg and here are his exact replys:
"The first time you load samples, data has to go
through several steps (USB to µprocessor, to DSP,
to data controller chips) and be processed.
Furthermore, samples are written at the same time
in RAM and in the internal Flash-RAM memory. This
demands for some computation-intensive time.
When you turn the Pa800 on next time, data are
already in the right format and at the right
place. In addition to this, loading from the
internal Flash-RAM to RAM is much faster than
loading from USB to RAM, since there are less
circuits and processes involved.
The above is true any time you load massive .SET data - not only samples.
However, we are working on improving the
first-time loading, so next OS versions might
show a shorter loading time (not sure of how much
at the moment).
"HOST ports, on the Pa800, are port where you connect Devices; they
work as Hosts (or Master, o A-type connectors), accepting Devices (or
Slaves, or B-type connectors).
- The DEVICE port, on the Pa800, is the one you use to connect Pa800
to a Host (computer); it acts as a Device (Slave, B-type) port, to
connect Hosts (Masters, A-type).
An alternative way of labelling them could have been TO HOST for the
current DEVICE, and TO DEVICE for the current HOST ports. In fact, at
the old times of serial ports, the port to connect a keyboard to a PC
was often labeled TO HOST.
Hope this makes it clear."
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George Kaye
Kaye's Music Scene
Reseda, California
818-881-5566
www.kayesmusicscene.com