geneticfunk
New member
When I control virtual faders using my BCF2000, the virtual faders don't keep up with fast Fader Controller movements. If the Controller fader movements are fast enough, sometimes most of the movement is missed by the virtual faders. This seems to have something do with Nyquist's sampling frequency rule, for those who know what that is about.
I've talked to various people about this, and I've heard that it could also have do with the smoothing between MIDI values that occurs in the BCF, similar to the "Smoother" modules in Reaktor.
I've tested other Control Surface faders, and some of them seem to keep up with the virtual faders better than with the BCF, but I've never seen both control surfaces run on the same system so it's tough to compare with any sort of certainty. However, even this more responsive behavior that I've observed on certain setups leaves a lot to be desired.
I was at the point of saying "maybe technology just isn't able to do this at this point in time," but then I saw an incontrovertible counterproof to this notion. That counterproof is: If you use the mouse to click on a control knob in Reaktor, and then move the mouse up and down in a very fast and complicated pattern, the knob's movements follow the mouse's movements perfectly.
So, the technology is out there to accomplish what I'm talking about. It just seems like none of the big brilliant companies out there have chosen to implement it yet... or more likely that they can make more profit by not implementing it at this point in time.
Many people say with some sort of disdain, "ooh, why would you want to move the fader fast, that's stupid," but I think that these people lack imagination. Fast fader movements can make for amazing control patterns and live performance possibilities. Anyone who has seen scratch dj's like Qbert or Dstyles knows better... and what Qbert and Dstyles do only scratches the surface of what responsive fader based control is capable of.
Any thoughts, insights?
I've talked to various people about this, and I've heard that it could also have do with the smoothing between MIDI values that occurs in the BCF, similar to the "Smoother" modules in Reaktor.
I've tested other Control Surface faders, and some of them seem to keep up with the virtual faders better than with the BCF, but I've never seen both control surfaces run on the same system so it's tough to compare with any sort of certainty. However, even this more responsive behavior that I've observed on certain setups leaves a lot to be desired.
I was at the point of saying "maybe technology just isn't able to do this at this point in time," but then I saw an incontrovertible counterproof to this notion. That counterproof is: If you use the mouse to click on a control knob in Reaktor, and then move the mouse up and down in a very fast and complicated pattern, the knob's movements follow the mouse's movements perfectly.
So, the technology is out there to accomplish what I'm talking about. It just seems like none of the big brilliant companies out there have chosen to implement it yet... or more likely that they can make more profit by not implementing it at this point in time.
Many people say with some sort of disdain, "ooh, why would you want to move the fader fast, that's stupid," but I think that these people lack imagination. Fast fader movements can make for amazing control patterns and live performance possibilities. Anyone who has seen scratch dj's like Qbert or Dstyles knows better... and what Qbert and Dstyles do only scratches the surface of what responsive fader based control is capable of.
Any thoughts, insights?