Whoa!
How'd I miss that?
Somewhere on the Korg Oasys PCI site, there's the story and picture
of the original Oasys keyboard that was abandoned before production.
It's great to see them come back to it.
--- In AN1x-list@yahoogroups.com, "Dale Kay" <admin@k...> wrote:
> http://www.karma-lab.com/oasys/o_main.html
>
> this OASYS... ;-)
> or go to the korg web site...
>
> and I agree with you on the AN200 as well as saying the DX200 work
great too in this aspect too.
>
> dale
> admin@k...
> Lancaster CA
>
> Great group to talk about all things
> musical @ signature_riffs_of_the_pros-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
>
> band web pages
> Inquisitor Betrayer
> http://www.soundclick.com/bands/7/inquisitorbetrayermusic.htm
>
> Angel's Wings
> http://www.soundclick.com/angelswings
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: zog2zog2003
> To: AN1x-list@yahoogroups.com
> Sent: Thursday, February 17, 2005 5:49 PM
> Subject: [AN1x] Re: AN200 newbie
>
>
>
> Hi,
> I've got a Korg Oasys, and, as far as I know, there isn't a linux
> driver that it works with. It will run on Windows up to ME, but
not
> 2000 or XP, and on earlier Macs. The Korg 1212 audio card is
> supported by Linux, though.
>
> The Oasys is a great card, if you don't need XP.
>
> I'm finding that the AN200's box is a really good midi knob box
for
> soft synths, or my Creamware card's synths. It's already laid
out
> like an analog synth for you.
>
> Another thing I like is to load up a sample player with 4
channels of
> different percussion sounds, then drive it from the AN200's midi
out.
>
> I'm also finding that I would have been fine without a lot of my
> equipment. There's plenty you can do with one synth and a lower
> level recording package, like maybe Cakewalk home studio, if you
want
> to make recordings.
>
>
> Pete
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]