Wow, lots going on in here!...
Miklos,
I wasn't quite suggesting a standalone PC. What would be really cool is a standalone hardware box - totally proprietary - no Windoze, no nothing. I actually spent (in my case, wasted) a bunch of time trying to build a dedicated linux box, just to run impulse reverbs. The job was way over my head, linux-wise, but I still like the idea. Impulse reverbs will _always_ be machine-killers, and I doubt the MIR will ever be an exception. I honestly don't think I'd want it running on my Mac, with my sequencer, VIs, and so on. But a standalone box, headless, totally controlled by software hosted on the Mac, would _seem_ like a built-in solution, for all intents and purposes. That's what I'd love. And I am with you on the whole "I can't afford another machine" problem... but VSL will also _never_ be cheap... Also, if you look at the current design philosophy of the MIR, it's likely to account, in effect, for 2 major functions in mixing; reverb/spatialization _and_ EQ. So the only really essential "plug" left to run on the host machine would be compression... for those who use it...
Oh, and the point about such a hypothetical box being totally proprietary is simply because I don't even want to be _tempted_ to run anything else on it! [;)]
cheers,
J.
Miklos,
I wasn't quite suggesting a standalone PC. What would be really cool is a standalone hardware box - totally proprietary - no Windoze, no nothing. I actually spent (in my case, wasted) a bunch of time trying to build a dedicated linux box, just to run impulse reverbs. The job was way over my head, linux-wise, but I still like the idea. Impulse reverbs will _always_ be machine-killers, and I doubt the MIR will ever be an exception. I honestly don't think I'd want it running on my Mac, with my sequencer, VIs, and so on. But a standalone box, headless, totally controlled by software hosted on the Mac, would _seem_ like a built-in solution, for all intents and purposes. That's what I'd love. And I am with you on the whole "I can't afford another machine" problem... but VSL will also _never_ be cheap... Also, if you look at the current design philosophy of the MIR, it's likely to account, in effect, for 2 major functions in mixing; reverb/spatialization _and_ EQ. So the only really essential "plug" left to run on the host machine would be compression... for those who use it...
Oh, and the point about such a hypothetical box being totally proprietary is simply because I don't even want to be _tempted_ to run anything else on it! [;)]
cheers,
J.