Thanks for the quick and very clear response Dietz! Mir seems to be such a lofty project and concept that it has not yet reached the stage of seemlessly integrating with existing setups/workflow/etc. However, this is obviously just the first public version, so I imagine it will only grow and get refined from here, especially as sheer computing power becomes less and less of an issue. The focus could then swing more in the direction of integration rather than how-can-we-get-this-to-run-on-a-non-Cray-machine.
-
I perfectly understand the needs for stems but I continue to not understand the sense of splitting a MIR output
-
Thanks to all for the interesting discussion. Like I said before, we have many ideas and concepts up our sleeves. Some of them will find their way into Vienna MIR, most of them will obviously be part of MIR Pro.
It's funny ... imagine you just built the first space ship, but before anybody has seen Earth from the orbit you get ask for comfy chairs, air condition and cold drinks ... 8-)
/Dietz - Vienna Symphonic Library -
I know, we truly are a demanding bunch, eh? [;)]
Or as they say in Wien: A Wohnsinn d' Laite (trying to spell out the Wienerisch Dialekt with my very limited Californian perspective...it's been a while since I lived there!)
-
Right you are Dietz! And, no one pronounces it quite like the Kronen Zeitung Verkaufer in the U4 Stadtsoper Station. This guy in particular, I swear I wanted to follow him around with manuscript paper and pencil like Bartok doing musicology in the countryside taking dictation of his speach. The musicality of this guy's dialect was incredibly fascinating. One day I'll make a sample library of Austrian dialects! ; ) Very cool indeed. Here, we are stuck with The Guvornator. ; )
-
Err ... I'm not sure if I really understand the question, but I'll try to answer it anyway. :-)
With "ordinary" panning, you are more or less restriced to "left/right" and "more reverb/less reverb". As MIR offers individual impulse reponses for almost every spot on a stage, we are able to think in much more meaningful terms of "nice position for violins", "nice position for a flute". So if this is what you are asking for, then the answer is: Yes the width of an VI should be treated like on a real stage - as long as you think it sounds nice, of course, because nothing hinders you from doing it in a way that nobody dared to try on the actual stage.
HTH,
/Dietz - Vienna Symphonic Library -
-
ok ic, great! Dietz, and MIR users I need to you ask you something, and I would like you to be frank with me. Basically, my new workstation for MIR should arrive by next week. As a general rule I don't change my work flow in a middle of project, and right now I have 7 more episodes left to finish scoring this project. Anyway, long story short, since this is the first official release of MIR, I would like to know if it is stable, and reliable enough to work with. BTW, for now I intend to run it on Vista. Thanks
-
I was a beta tester and I don't remember a single freeze with vista 64.
According to the first Murphy's Law: "If something can go wrong, it will."
So go with MIR and Windows 7 and you will save a lot of time!
(I still use Vista because I am so lazy....)