So recently I made a collection of custom waveforms, for the purpose of being used in triple osc, LFO's, et c. A bunch of people have seemingly found them useful. I was wondering, would it be reasonable to include these in LMMS? Or are they too cryptic for the average user to figure out what to do with? I'm thinking the most likely problem would be people going "oh, sample files" and trying to play them in AFP, and not hearing anything...
But the upside would be, that then these waveforms could be used more easily in collaboration, as they would be included in LMMS and could thus be used in projects without including extra files as dependencies. Some of them are just interesting sounds, but some actually add functionality - like the low-amplitude ones, which make using FM-synthesis on triple-osc much more feasible, or ones that can be used in LFO's to produce fun rhythm patterns and "trance gates" (I haven't yet published these ones as I'm still making them). What do you think? ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ WatchGuard Dimension instantly turns raw network data into actionable security intelligence. It gives you real-time visual feedback on key security issues and trends. Skip the complicated setup - simply import a virtual appliance and go from zero to informed in seconds. http://pubads.g.doubleclick.net/gampad/clk?id=123612991&iu=/4140/ostg.clktrk _______________________________________________ LMMS-devel mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/lmms-devel
