Hi there,
Will you be adding adjustable preload capabilities to VI? I've just got the library. Loving it, but notice that it places huge memory burden on PC (as expected). RAM save isn't the favoured solution for me as I feel it is a bit of cludge, as it was with Halion. I don't want to have to tell the tool what to unload. Is a bit messy for my liking.
The huge sample base of the symphonic orchestra means that currently it is pretty impossible to load all instruments into a single memory space.
However, if you offerred the capability to lower the pre-load, that would help out by allowing more to be loaded at the expense of latency?
I would also suggest - as I believe I have done before - that you add a zero pre-load capability so that no samples are loaded into memory at all, but instead VI acts as an intelligent file routing piece of software. Raise the latency to compensate perhaps. Those of us who don't play music live and merely notate the music could then easily have the entire orchestra loaded into a single PC or perhaps even laptop. And project load times would be very quick.
As a professional software designer as well as a professional composer, I know that the above is more that feasible to achieve.
Will you be adding adjustable preload capabilities to VI? I've just got the library. Loving it, but notice that it places huge memory burden on PC (as expected). RAM save isn't the favoured solution for me as I feel it is a bit of cludge, as it was with Halion. I don't want to have to tell the tool what to unload. Is a bit messy for my liking.
The huge sample base of the symphonic orchestra means that currently it is pretty impossible to load all instruments into a single memory space.
However, if you offerred the capability to lower the pre-load, that would help out by allowing more to be loaded at the expense of latency?
I would also suggest - as I believe I have done before - that you add a zero pre-load capability so that no samples are loaded into memory at all, but instead VI acts as an intelligent file routing piece of software. Raise the latency to compensate perhaps. Those of us who don't play music live and merely notate the music could then easily have the entire orchestra loaded into a single PC or perhaps even laptop. And project load times would be very quick.
As a professional software designer as well as a professional composer, I know that the above is more that feasible to achieve.