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Very nice!
Great work Simon 🙂
Cheers and a good new year 2020 to you!
Tom
Great work Simon!
Love the flute and Diffuse sounds very nice and smooth too…
Cheers,
Tom
Hey metric,
I guess you found this page already?
http://www.uvi.net/uviscript/That is the complete documentation of the language and some examples.
Also, you can open all the script processor files that come with Falcon.
And finally there is a collection of scripts called “Punch!” by Louis Coucka which you can dissect.
http://louiscouka.com/software.html
He has a delay-script which should give you the needed idea to work from…I found the Lua-Editor “ZeroBrane” very nice to work with – it’s even written in Lua:
https://studio.zerobrane.com/But any text editor will do, most other programming editors have Lua support too (Sublime Text, Komodo Edit, Notepad++ etc.).
Let me know if you need more specific help.
Cheers,
Tom
Well, that is some high-quality “plastic” I’d say…  🙂
Nice one Simon, thanks!
Tom
I’m by no means a pro when it comes to that part, but I have a system that works for me:
All my audio files are on each machine on a drive E:\Audio_Content. On my main machine that is an internal large drive, on my laptop it’s an external USB 3 drive. So file paths always stay the same.
Large samples I leave where they are (sorted by where they come from) and reference them.
If I chop up something for a patch or create a wavetabe, I collect the samples with the patch (like you can do in Falcon with “Save program and samples as…”) in my Falcon/Kontakt/whatever library.
I keep the different locations synced with a software called “Second Copy” (Windows only AFAIK).
Having the same data on multiple drives is also a way of backing it up – I personally would not feel well with using the same drive for everything.
I also have one independent backup of the whole thing on an older computer.
It can also make sense to collect all used samples and patches with a particular song you do in your DAW, so you can be sure to be able to re-create things a couple of years in the future.
Cheers,
Tom
You can set the content locations in preferences.
If that doesn’t work, maybe contact tech support? It works for me on Windows 8.1 x64.
Cheers,
Tom
Did you download the updated factory content for Falcon as well?
Then you should see sounds with 1.2 in their names.
Cheers,
Tom
P.S. Falcon is in dire need of a browser with tagging and search so that things like these sounds can be fund easily…
Thanks!
I sometimes have problems with post-editing too – something is broken there it seems. Hopefully Nik can track it down when he has more time again.
Cheers,
Tom
Yeah, a big welcome from me too Olivier!
Good to have you around. 🙂Cheers,
Tom
Nik is currently very busy with other stuff, we can look into further improvements when he has more free time again.
I guess the number of sections is a matter of taste. I personally am a less-sections person too, but others like it more subdivided.
But yeah, recent/unread posts would be nice – ATM it’s a bit hard to keep track of what’s new…Cheers,
Tom
Of course!
Everything you place on keygroup level is instanced per note, while what you place on the layer level is only instanced once for all keys.
You should only place effects on keygroup level if it’s absolutely necessary for some reason but generally avoid it.Cheers,
Tom
Can one work around it in this case somehow by using the envelopes of the main synth to control the delay, maybe by using an intermediate control that is controlled by the envelopes and is able to “reach” the delay?
Just brainstorming here, I didn’t try it yet, but basically the system “knows” the needed stuff already, so an envelope follower isn’t really needed as long as both the main synth and the delay are inside Falcon.In case the main synth signal is external, it may be possible to do it like for instance in Bitwig Studio where you have an envelope follower as a factory device (“Audio MOD”) and can drive any plugin device parameter with it.
Cheers,
Tom
Cool, thanks for the info!
Well, I guess you are used to sending out gigabytes of data – for a mere 11 Mb, I wouldn’t worry about speed 😉
Cheers,
Tom
Cool – a rather nice instrument and interesting structure.
What threw me was, that I expected to switches to be on when up, but they are on when down… 😉
Cheers,
Tom
Thanks Simon,
Sounds great! What instruments are the students playing in the sample?
Reminds me of a sound I once used in the score of a video on the planet neptune…
Download speed was good here 🙂
Cheers,
Tom
Great you like it Pat!
I hope this will help the Falcon community to grow and thrive 🙂
Extra thanks to Nik for all the work on the site!!!
Cheers,
Tom