me tooooooooooo
just run that sample rate right into the ground if you would please, crush it under your heel, mix it in with those old cigarette butts over there if possible. lets get dirty.
Slow down, sailor!
That’s longshoreman, to you.
If built in OZ, I assume Australia, why can’t it be shipped in Australia?
As written elsewhere, because of local certification, which should be obtained in a few weeks. So it’s a temporary issue.
@Woovebox is there an option to not use Wooveconnect to render stems, etc.
OK sounds good.
I assume there isn’t, as the USB port is for charging only, and there is no SD card.
I’ll go for anything that’s ridiculously anything. And I treated myself to express shipping.
Apologies for not replying to everyone - this is a new account and there is a number-of-posts-per-day limit. Also, interest is off the charts (thank you!), and we’re working hard to build Wooves and get them ready for shipping when the local PO opens.
@RealTinyPenguin I may create an off-line tool at some point, but for now doing everything in the browser saves a lot of cross-platform development headaches, while making things easy to access.
If you have a SYSEX manager, you can send and receive patches, songs and sample kits that way. But rendering the audio (and uploading samples) requires some special code.
I don’t think there is anything stopping you from running Wooveconnect locally though; the rendering happens locally on your own machine and not on some server somewhere.
I ordered within minutes of seeing this thread and finding out this thing exists! Can’t wait to get it!
@Woovebox - very nice. I have some questions:
- Technically, can BT Audio be implemented. Imagine on the transit/sub with BT earpiece plugged in.
- How durable is the main knob which will be very frequently used. Is it rated at 1 million turns or something.
- Is this the final feature set or still a roadmap of newer functionalities to come.
Yeah. If we can somehow download the Wooveconnect page and run in browser that would be enough for me. I don’t like the risk of a website being down and unable to access files.
BT audio has been a wish of mine in hardware for awhile. Minor latency doesn’t really matter to me.
The UI/UX looks like a nightmare. If I need to carry a book to be able to operate this toy then no fun at all.
And no, this is no Pocket Operator. They are made with a very limited feature set, while this is a can-do-all device. It feels obnoxiously overwhelming. Jack of all trades?
Disclosure: I bought one right away. Like most devices, this one will have a learning curve. I should probably explore it in the manner of peeling layers off an onion, starting with the most accessible layers, then slowly moving inward to the more nested, complex functions. If I try to implement all its features in my first project, I will go crazy. The ultimate test of the UI/UX is not how easy it is to find things, but rather how fast it is to change settings once I know where to find those settings. In other words, I’m okay with a steep learning curve, so long as there is an eventual dividend of speed and fluidity. I suppose that remains to be seen.
Anything that is a 90s studio in a box is amazing, of course the DirtyWave M8 comes to mind right away.
But this is really fairly priced and damn cool. Something I don’t need at all but I look forward to seeing what you all think when you get it. Because at this price down the road I can see myself grabbing one and enjoying it a lot, especially if I have to travel.
For now, my pocket studio of choice is the PO KO.
Sorry for silly question, but …
Is the price in AUD or USD ?
Rude