Well, according to last post of Peter
Ullrich, there\ufffds also a Digidesign application called "Softsynth"
existing.
Never knew that before and maybe it\ufffds an ancestor of the later Turbosynth.
According to the Soundtools/Digidesign stuff I own,- yes, it\ufffds all ATARI.
My friend and engineer owns the Mac versions and the converters/interfaces too,- and he has NuBus Macs in stock and just got my last screen adapter for such a machine,- so even my gear will leave the house, I\ufffdll have access when I\ufffdll ever need it again.
I\ufffdm definitely running out of room in my house and have to sell much more next future, not only the ATARI stuff, also hardware instruments and modules.
Am 11.01.2013 13:10, schrieb kevin@...:
Never knew that before and maybe it\ufffds an ancestor of the later Turbosynth.
According to the Soundtools/Digidesign stuff I own,- yes, it\ufffds all ATARI.
My friend and engineer owns the Mac versions and the converters/interfaces too,- and he has NuBus Macs in stock and just got my last screen adapter for such a machine,- so even my gear will leave the house, I\ufffdll have access when I\ufffdll ever need it again.
I\ufffdm definitely running out of room in my house and have to sell much more next future, not only the ATARI stuff, also hardware instruments and modules.
Am 11.01.2013 13:10, schrieb kevin@...:
\ufffdYou are definitely right about the name (Turbosynth as opposed to Softsynth, although the later may have been a more apt name).
Wow, SoundTools AD/DA, that goes back some years. I assume that all your apps are Atari and not Mac?
/KRM