![]() Myriad is like a new, improved, super-version of Sample Manager and it's great. But the stuff I do use (batch processing and destructive editing) did, and are greatly improved. I don't know if the tagging and metadata features from the old products made it across intact to the newer ones since I never use those features. Have their apps become abandonware?Īs for AudioFinder and Samplism, has anyone got any preferences?Yes, AudioFile Engineering has morphed into a company called Aurchitect, which offers newer versions of most of the old AudioFile products. Looks like Audiofile is under new ownership and their apps are no longer offered on the website. Reviving an old thread because I'm also looking for a way to organize my samples. Google is approaching image search in some interesting ways, maybe they'll tackle sounds. It's too bad that adding your own sounds would require tedious one by one tagging of the files, as if we had nothing better to do.Īnd do we want to search only for things familiar, or do we want to discover new things? But (superficially) looking at all the current third party "media management" tools, it seems Apple's built-in library does it better. Maybe we're waiting for a brilliant outside-the-box discovery that would simplify all that. Do you want to find all sounds made by a talking-drum, or are you looking for sounds that resemble "Wheee-appp-dum"? Or those that sound a lot like "I'll be back"? A useful system would search from many different criteria and would automatically tag loops and samples from all these directions. But extending the concept is a big undertaking that nobody has really tackled. ![]() The supplied Apple loops derive much of their utility from having been pegged into a scheme with labels and a database to search them. I don't have much hope for a solution until someone develops a way to group sounds that everybody will more or less subscribe too. I have the apple loops utility but I just wanted to check how others do it before I really get stuck into something only to find there's a better way I could have taken from the start.ĭo people use other software to manage their loops? Are there more intuitive ways to add samples to Apple loops? Any other tips? but even this doesn't quite break down the sheer amount there is. drum loops, drum one-shots, bass loops etc. I did begin attempting to create a folder that separated them into categories e.g. I get a bunch of new samples each month with Computer Magazine too. I would ideally love to have them all accessible via the Logic loops library under the 'My Loops' tab but it seems that going through and adding each individual sample and tagging its properties would be quite a tedious task and unfortunately sat in their folder they don't get searched through so often. I, as I presume most digital music creators do, have a rather large folder of samples I've collected over the years and I wanted to ask how others manage their sample collections?
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |