Our friends at discchord wrote up the release last week.Best gpu for resolume This is a tutorial on how to create DXV encoded video clips for use with Resolume Arena or Avenue.
#Vdmx music windows#
It also runs on Windows – and Android, and iOS, so anything you have with multi-touch support probably works. Oh yeah, in other touch-app news, touchAble got a major update, and remains the Ableton Live controller app to beat. And that would make this tool indispensible. Translation: you could have a display in your interface that can be used for live previews and the like. But in future, the developers says we can expect NDI support. For now, that just means some eye candy on an XY pad. The coolest feature in there to me is a custom GLSL shader object. I might have skipped this news altogether but – I buried the lede.
#Vdmx music software#
But the developers did tell me they added 14-bit control to the list, which would be great for software modulars, for example. Those seem essential in a 2020 MIDI controller app – and in fact this lull seems the perfect time for someone to go out and make a MIDI 2.0 controller app.
There’s no support for 14-bit MIDI or MPE (polyphonic MIDI expression), either. (You do get movement speed and return-to controls on sliders, though, which are the most important.) I’m a bit sad that the physics on the Lemur are missing, though – that was one of its most interesting features, and seems like it was never fully explored. The UI even looks like Lemur – though, to be fair, a lot of those widgets in turn looked like related widgets in Max. They didn’t do a “proxy” app, but at this point I’m actually just as glad they didn’t. On OSC, that’s no problem for MIDI, you’ll want something like rtpMIDI. You need to connect to the software you want to control over a network – or with some multitouch displays and devices, locally.
#Vdmx music mac#
Since it uses OSC and MIDI, even though it’s for Windows, it could still be a touch app for a Mac user – running on a Windows tablet in place of the iPad. That’s especially true on the visual side, which lately has dominated with the PC’s more inexpensive, GPU-friendly hardware options. So forget the deadmau5 connection for a moment – it seems about time Windows got its own mature touch app for general purpose applications. Most apps focus on individual apps (like Ableton Live or Apple Logic), and most are still iOS-only.
TouchOSC is still plodding along but hasn’t changed much since its debut. Lemur, the app based on the hardware that started the whole genre, hasn’t seen active development in a long time. The time seems ripe for a new controller – well, once live shows start again. It’s like a Windows successor to Lemur, with some powerful features, developed by one of the developers behind TouchDesigner. Deadmau5 is releasing the app he’s torture-tested in his live shows, OSC/PILOT.