Feature: Each cue now has a button to assign a MIDI trigger.Most LiveProfessor settings (Snapshots, Cues, Cue Actions, Controllers, Controller Maps, etc) can be saved in a global Library so you can use them in other projects. The way hardware MIDI controllers control plug-in parameters is changed. Feature: “Route back” you can now split a signal and route it back to a plug-in earlier in the signal chain (look out for feedback).Summing on all plug-in inputs, split on all plug-in outputs. Also added were filter, scale and logic options. You now add a new Controller, you add as many knobs, buttons, sliders as you want to match your physical device, and then assign MIDI messages to these (instead of directly to the plug-in-parameters).Įach plug-in instance can now have as many controller maps as you want, and you can switch between them like you do with snapshots. Users reported that they where limited by the early system of a global map with 8 layers. MIDI controllers: Another change is the way MIDI controllers are handled. But if all the plug-ins are connected to each other, they run on the same core, as they have to wait for each other any way. So if you have 4 plug-ins and 4 cores each plug-in gets its own core. Multi-core processors are now supported so that each signal chain can run on its own core. In the same way all plug-in outputs can be split to multiple destinations. Routing is done like before but you can now use the CTRL-key to add more then one input to a plug-in. The audio engine has changed: Each plug-in input can now mix any number of sources, from sound card inputs or other plug-in outputs.
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