What I meant is that, as far as I can gather, the standalone version has a single "omni" setting for it's midi. It respondes equally regardless of which midi channel you send on. If it was multitimbral you could allocate say the first matrix slot to be channel 1 the second to be channel 2, etc. Therfore the stanalone could play back quite sophisticated orchestrations.
These orchestrations could also be created within a host such as Logic then combined to a single midi file which could then be routed to the standalone allowing playback without the DAW.
dpcon,
You were right you can open another instance by copying and re-naming the app. I tried this and routed 1 unitor port to instance 1 and a second port to instance 2. They both could be played individually or together. I guess this further increases the maximum RAM for samples though I'm not sure how stable it would be and as I guess the configuration would not be supported it could at any time disappear with an OS or Vienna Instrument software upgrade.
Julian
These orchestrations could also be created within a host such as Logic then combined to a single midi file which could then be routed to the standalone allowing playback without the DAW.
dpcon,
You were right you can open another instance by copying and re-naming the app. I tried this and routed 1 unitor port to instance 1 and a second port to instance 2. They both could be played individually or together. I guess this further increases the maximum RAM for samples though I'm not sure how stable it would be and as I guess the configuration would not be supported it could at any time disappear with an OS or Vienna Instrument software upgrade.
Julian