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#271894 - 09/24/09 03:21 PM
Re: AUDYA HD - Quick Access
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14269
Loc: NW Florida
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But it ISN'T 'like a computer'... PARTS of it are like a computer, and parts of it aren't. You want an ALL computer arranger, there's the MS. No? Didn't think so! The thing is, accept that the Audya is only a SLIGHTLY more computer like arranger than most of the rest, but it is still a LONG way from being basically a desktop computer in a keyboard case. Ketron don't advertise it as such. Expecting it to be something that is patently is NOT is simply a way to frustrate yourself unnecessarily. Accept it the way it is, and make some music! If anything good can come from this type of wishful thinking, it will have to be way down the line. The Audya's hardware is what it is. It still seems to do a pretty decent job of being an arranger (in the way that 99% of us actually use one!). As long as we keep an eye out for unreliability issues (and this is just the one case) and owners realize that a backup regimen MUST be used (it would be interesting to see if the same people that don't back up their arrangers are the same people that don't back up their computers, either ), I don't see how any of this is a deal breaker for potential Ketron users. Me, I am still FAR more concerned about musical issues (timing, lack of full chord choice for audio loops) than any hardware issue that CAN be worked around. Let's wait to hear about a LOT more HD problems from Audya owners before we write this off, eh?
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An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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#271896 - 09/24/09 10:51 PM
Re: AUDYA HD - Quick Access
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Senior Member
Registered: 01/30/06
Posts: 3944
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Originally posted by leezone: Diki,
i know it's for ROM expansion,
but my point is that it's easy to access
not easy to access the HD, and i'd probably want to swap out hardrive more often than ROM, perhaps to back it up, as i don't have 6 hrs to wait around, and no i don't want to do it overnight
if AUDYA is "like a computer" then make a small door for it so i can get to it quickly as i can on most any laptop
[This message has been edited by leezone (edited 09-24-2009).] This is the best idea yet, it makes sense to just make a hatch with 4 screws, ribbon cable and power to remove the HD from the underside of the Audya like the T2, 3 mins and it's swapped out. Do hope Ketron read this site a lot of good ideas from people who have to use these KBs. You need to remember that apart from the sliders and he wheels the HDD is the only part that's moving all the time about 10000 rpm and the little shearch arm is going like a line dancing fiddlers elbow! Tony [This message has been edited by Tony Hughes (edited 09-24-2009).]
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Tyros 4/Pair SR 350/ PC with a i8 intel chip, XENYX 802, Ford Focus 2 litre/Tascam DR07/Brother printer/Designjet 500/ our Doris/5 Grandchildren/ white boxers short Kymart shipped over and Typhoo Tea Earl Grey
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#271902 - 09/25/09 01:25 PM
Re: AUDYA HD - Quick Access
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14269
Loc: NW Florida
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Bitch, bitch, bitch... You all want the Audya to be something it isn't. You all want technology on it that no other arranger has. You all want the future NOW... And not one of you has a clue about how expensive adding all you want would make things. Look, for the last time... FORGET about thinking it is a computer with a keyboard attached. It isn't. It is pretty much like any other arranger out there, a combination of proprietary chips (to run the sounds, effects and I/O) and a RISC computer to run the OS. Trouble with all this is, it costs a LOT more for a custom chip to do, say, USB2 than it costs for off the shelf computer motherboards and PCIe cards to provide USB2. Computer hardware always runs YEARS ahead of dedicated RISC chips. Just tooling for the die is millions. You can't expect this from a TINY keyboard manufacturer. Look, if it is SO easy, why haven't any of YOU done it yet? In the meantime, and despite all it's technological stone-agery, it SOUNDS better than any other arranger out there. And, unless you are simply a techno-geek with no interest in the TASK that the machine is designed for (it SURE sounds like you are all more interested in the peripheral technology than how well it performs its' TASK), surely that should be your PRIMARY concern..? My objections to the Audya are all MUSICAL ones. So WHAT if it has USB1? Shouldn't we still be up in arms about the fact that the loops can't play a sus4 or a dim or an aug, rather than how long it takes to back up? I'll tell you one thing. My audience neither knows, nor cares what kind of USB is on board. BUT... they know good sound when they hear it!
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An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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