Mac and Music News
Apr 14 - 04:29 PM | Misc > Broadjam |
MetaJam is a comprehensive artist promotion and career management software that helps musicians to easily develop a proper online presence, providing various tools to build, organize and control their own stuff, from songs to press kits or websites, and get in touch with the music industry.
It is available with the free MetaJam LE download, or in the full MetaJam package, disclosing key features, and exclusive benefits through the BroadJam community. Minimum requirements are a G3 processor, 64 MB RAM, OS X and a CD ROM drive.
Ed: Looks like really cool software -- so many features there, in fact, you might pick and choose what's most essential to you. Since this is a big release and many of our readers are likely to be looking for tools to manage their music careers, we'll work on a full review soon. -PK
It is available with the free MetaJam LE download, or in the full MetaJam package, disclosing key features, and exclusive benefits through the BroadJam community. Minimum requirements are a G3 processor, 64 MB RAM, OS X and a CD ROM drive.
Ed: Looks like really cool software -- so many features there, in fact, you might pick and choose what's most essential to you. Since this is a big release and many of our readers are likely to be looking for tools to manage their music careers, we'll work on a full review soon. -PK
Broadjam METAJAM | Post a comment ? |
Apr 14 - 12:08 AM | Music Software > Sonic Core |
Creamware has returned with a new product line that includes:
- SFP Home (3 dsp + FX)
- SFP Project (6 dsp + FX + synths)
- SFP Pro (14 dsp and lot of things...)
Upgrade should be free for recent customers. There's a new website with a new name on the link below. Hopefully other news will appear soon in regards to OS X support!
Ed:UPDATE: This news was initially sent to us with an incorrect URL. (.com domain instead of the proper .de) Now it's fixed, and check it out: Creamware, back to life! Lots of info there to check out. Enjoy. -PK
- SFP Home (3 dsp + FX)
- SFP Project (6 dsp + FX + synths)
- SFP Pro (14 dsp and lot of things...)
Upgrade should be free for recent customers. There's a new website with a new name on the link below. Hopefully other news will appear soon in regards to OS X support!
Ed:UPDATE: This news was initially sent to us with an incorrect URL. (.com domain instead of the proper .de) Now it's fixed, and check it out: Creamware, back to life! Lots of info there to check out. Enjoy. -PK
2 users'comments |
Apr 13 - 04:01 PM | Apple > OSXFAQ |
Our friend Scott Shepard has gotten Apple's Pro Audio Training Authors Mary Plummer and Robert Brock to chat on Inside Mac Radio about Apple's latest offerings, Garage Band, Soundtrack, and the newly-streamlined Logic 6 lineup. As usual, you can download an MP3 of the show for listening via iTunes or your iPod. MacMusic will be back with Inside Mac Radio later this week with our Musik Messe wrap-up, but if you're still hungry for audio, check out my 3/23 chat with Scott.
Inside Mac Radio | Post a comment ? |
Apr 13 - 03:09 PM | Computer Hardware > Wave Idea |
Bitstream 3X is the new MIDI controller from Wave Idea, available in July/August 2004. A short preview here: "3X" stands for "3 Axis"; the controller features full control over X, Y and Z dimensions. A joystick allows control of X and Y, while an infrared controller is used for the Z axis. That's just the beginning, though, with 35 knobs, 8 sliders, 16 buttons, an arpeggiator, motion sampler, curve models and programmability, and graphic display. We've got the impressive full specs.
read more | 2 users'comments |
Apr 13 - 02:53 PM | Apple > Apple |
Apple's entry-level eMacs keep getting better for the value conscious with today's price break / speed bump. The US$799 eMac now features a 1.25 GHz G4, 333 MHz DDR SDRAM, three out of five USB ports making the leap to USB 2.0, and faster ATI Radeon 9200 graphics. The US$999 model replaces the combo drive with a SuperDrive and double the hard drive from 40GB to 80GB. The machines got the upgrade to USB 2.0 instead of FireWire 800, but that makes sense: many consumer devices now use USB 2.0, particularly those aimed at the PC market, but consumers should be perfectly happy with the speed of FireWire 400.
Apple eMac | Post a comment ? |