Debugging the model was fun, but now that it's working, I am forced to
decide what the next step is, if anything. Any project here would be a lot of work.
As someone mentioned, trying to get new code to behave exactly as the original
as far as the envelopes, voltage ranges for each parameter, etc might be almost
impossible. But if the new code doesn't match the sound of the old, is it even
worth doing
One could make a different synth using the M6 hw, but is there
any point to that
Bob
From:
"jan@... [oberheim]" <oberheim@yahoogroups.com>
To:
oberheim@yahoogroups.com
Sent:
Wednesday, July 23, 2014 6:37 PM
Subject:
Re: [oberheim] Re: Dream on, geek: The Überh eim Matrix-1000 Project
Making use of current hardware, and rewriting code for a platform like the AVR, makes a lot of sense. To do that, we'd need to know a *lot* about what the original code actually does, though.
To make things easier, I'll switch the Google Doc over to "Everybody may edit".
Still marvelling about that project of yours, Bob. Rebuilding a Matrix as a Verilog model - incredible!