

More to my delight, look at how he is able to actually understand all of the wacky (tongue-in-cheek) Ins and outs of writing an extremely complex system such as Overture 4, and now 5. It would be easy to plug them into Overture mainline source modules.įootnote: Don Williams is a brilliant, apparently self-made programmer. Referring to is written for native assembly in Pentium-class systems or similar for Apple systems, MIDI handling, local networking, the Internet, and so so much more. The various built-in sound systems and codecs, video streaming and formatting, SMPTE time code, These environments provide an unbelievable array of screen-handling tools for graphics, access to Predominately, Overture 4, and 5 are written in the Microsoft C/C++. I will concede that there may be imbedded tidbits of assembler and VB here and there in the code,Īnd any (if any) purchased code may be in the form of assembly language, such as audio streaming, net, which is an expansion of regular C++ with Microsoft Modules are very easy to incorporate inline with regular C++ which may be used as included modules. Assembler code fragments and Visual Basic On the order of complexity of a minor operating system. it is too tedious for such a large project.

The complexity and the great fine-tuning details do not lend well to this extreme level of complex project Please, take this comment just as friendly thoughts in the name of much better and improved Overture, not as messing in your business! After all you are the one to decide what to do.Īs a former programmer, I can easily assure you that Overture is not programmed in assembly language. Probably it would be very helpful if you exchange some experience with him, since you have plans to integrate audio tracks and audio recording in Overture 6, for sure you would need much better engine than the current one /The playback of large projects is problematic and there are crackling noises, even at 1024 buffer size/ to work better with the ASIO audio interfaces, as Cubase /It can playback with no problem projects over 62GB of Ram at 128 or 256 buffer size/, Pro Tools, Logic X work with them. I have talked with really good sound engineers and they told me about that SAW Studio has one of the best Audio Engines, even better than Pro Tools, and the DAW is written in Assembly. He is going to release new 64-bit, redesigned version of his DAW.

There is one guy who possibly you may know Bob Lentini the developer of SAW Studio. From the dump files I think Overture is written in Assembly. Can I make suggestion about the improvement of the Audio Engine?ġ.
