Folderol wrote:
> On Wed, 2 Dec 2009 10:09:27 +1100
> Loki Davison <loki.davison@email-addr-hidden> wrote:
>
>>>> On the other hand, the KARMA software is available for the Korg M50
>>>> too (and the Triton: http://www.karma-lab.com/ ) but it needs Windows
>>>> or a Mac; and the price of a new M50-61 and KARMA is a good $400 less
>>>> than the M3-M.
>>> In fact, perhaps the cheapest way to get hold of KARMA technology is
>>> KARMA for Triton and a secondhand Triton LE - shouldn't be much more
>>> than $500 overall. (Might be worth asking whether it would work with
>>> the PA-50 too, but I wouldn't necessarily hold out much hope.)
>> Though for that kind of money you can get quite a nice guitar and
>> lessons. If you really want nice guitar you can always ask one of the
>> wonderful guitarist here on LAU to record it for you. :) In turn you
>> might be able to do keyboard / piano parts for there tracks...
>>
>> Loki
>
> You mean like, working together, sort of... collaborating?
I was going to mention that there might be folk on the list here who
could do a nice guitar track ...
> Nah! It'll never catch on. Next you'll be saying people could write an
> entire operating system that way :P
I think all modern OSes were written that way. At least, all of them
were written by teams of people collaborating in various ways. Only one
I could think of that might have been a one-man product is the Pick
Operating System, but I'm sure it outgrew one-man roots long ago ...
Although one could argue that Linux was designed by Linux and
implemented by a bit of Linus and lots of other folk, with Linux having
the final say about what goes in and how things are done ...
-- David gnome@email-addr-hidden authenticity, honesty, community _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@email-addr-hidden http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-userReceived on Wed Dec 2 12:15:03 2009
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