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#506423 - 09/07/22 01:42 PM
Re: How to modify SMF on a Yamaha SX 900
[Re: montunoman]
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Member
Registered: 04/15/03
Posts: 43
Loc: Croatia
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#506442 - 09/09/22 02:09 PM
Re: How to modify SMF on a Yamaha SX 900
[Re: montunoman]
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14282
Loc: NW Florida
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The one problem I have with offloading editing to computers and tablets is, how long will the software be supported? Your arranger will (with care!) still be working and making great music for 20-30+ years, but what are the odds that a) the software will be available, b) it will be updated to run on an 20-30 year newer OS, or c) you can find a working computer or tablet that is 20-30 years old and still working well?
Let’s say you want to sell your arranger after 15-20 years of service. Will the new owner be able to find the software and hardware to be able to do essential editing by then?
Tablets are even worse, with closed ecosystems. There is iPad software for the BK-9 that is no longer available because it was removed from the Apple Store. It stopped being available several years ago, not long after the BK-9 was discontinued… I have a current iPad, and I cannot get it.
Add to that, what are the odds a developer will continue to update a software to run on newer OS’s after the arranger is discontinued and newer ones use a different system? You MIGHT be able to keep an old computer working for 20 years to use the legacy software, but what happens if you sell the arranger? Throw in the computer for free?
I feel that essential editing capabilities MUST be included in the OS of the arranger itself, not left to the vagaries of an extremely volatile computer market.
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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#506448 - 09/09/22 06:45 PM
Re: How to modify SMF on a Yamaha SX 900
[Re: Diki]
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Senior Member
Registered: 09/29/05
Posts: 6703
Loc: Roswell,GA/USA
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The one problem I have with offloading editing to computers and tablets is, how long will the software be supported? Your arranger will (with care!) still be working and making great music for 20-30+ years, but what are the odds that a) the software will be available, b) it will be updated to run on an 20-30 year newer OS, or c) you can find a working computer or tablet that is 20-30 years old and still working well?
Let’s say you want to sell your arranger after 15-20 years of service. Will the new owner be able to find the software and hardware to be able to do essential editing by then?
Tablets are even worse, with closed ecosystems. There is iPad software for the BK-9 that is no longer available because it was removed from the Apple Store. It stopped being available several years ago, not long after the BK-9 was discontinued… I have a current iPad, and I cannot get it.
Add to that, what are the odds a developer will continue to update a software to run on newer OS’s after the arranger is discontinued and newer ones use a different system? You MIGHT be able to keep an old computer working for 20 years to use the legacy software, but what happens if you sell the arranger? Throw in the computer for free?
I feel that essential editing capabilities MUST be included in the OS of the arranger itself, not left to the vagaries of an extremely volatile computer market. ===like there are still going to be 'Arrangers' around 20-30 yeares from now, much less nerds manually programming them in TODAY'S programming/editing languages on what will then be the equivalent of a Commodore 8. I doubt if you'll feel any pain giving away your computer/museum piece with your 30 yr. old arranger. Plus, who's going to buy it, the Smithsonian? . Given the rapid rate of technological progress, I think it's highly unlikely that any technology based musical instrument today will be relevant/useful 20-30 years from now. Piano tuners, on the other hand, will probably still be able to earn a comfortable living . Also, 20-30 years from now, the only persons owning today's arrangers will be you, Russ, and Fran . BTW Diki, before you go into full counter-attack mode , I'm just messin' with ya'----sorta'. chas
_________________________
"Faith means not wanting to know what is true." [Nietzsche]
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#506458 - 09/10/22 11:20 AM
Re: How to modify SMF on a Yamaha SX 900
[Re: montunoman]
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14282
Loc: NW Florida
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@chas
B3 is getting pretty old too! Worth more than when it first came out! Wish I had held onto some of my old analogs, that Odyssey might buy me a car!
It seems difficult to predict what’s going to appreciate and what’s going to end up valueless, a lot depends on what future generations decide us ‘cool’ long after those that used it moved on to newer tech…
But even personally, I have got close to 15+ years out of each of my primary gigging arrangers, and plan on running the BK-9 until I pass on. And, if I sold my G70, I’d prefer to not have to give away an aging computer at the same time just so the new owner can edit styles!
I know you’re just joshing, but as times get tighter, fewer and fewer of us fossils that still use arrangers can afford to drop huge bucks on the latest tech, and the odds of anything in the far future being any good at the genres we like to play is slim. We all better start taking really good care of them, first Roland bail, I wonder who’s next? My money’s on Korg if the PA5x’s bugs don’t get squashed pretty quickly. Few pros are buying them if they can’t gig with them as is.
More and more, arrangers are complete rubbish doing modern genres, and way overpriced compared to things like the MODX+ etc.. The final days of the home organ market comes to mind watching what is happening to arrangers.
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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