![]() “Waves central launches everytime you start your pc, even if you are not using waves plugins in the main time” -> I switched its ‘starting with pc’ off in taskmanager. I mean, any audio company can decide at some point that they want to do some fishy business with our devices and hide it so carefully that most people would never find out but I think it’s unlikely and worrying about it would most likely lead to paranoia and a waste of time that could have been spend on making music. I think that the best idea would be to stop using third party plugins altogether but what’s the point. I had some kind of Avast warning with Steven Slate and XLN manager though, so I don’t know. I keep everything up to date and have premium version of Avast and no warning appears. “You can not use COSMOS without an internet connection “you should be logged in to your WAVES account”” -> I logged in and then unplugged the Internet connection and Cosmos didn’t stop working. It’s a creative sample player with eight layers with BPM detection, time-stretching, modulation, and a few other cool features. Waves Audio also released CR8 Creative Sampler. However, it works just fine with WAV, AIF, OGG, and FLAC files. One thing to keep in mind is that COSMOS doesn’t yet support MP3 files. No matter where you placed your samples, or how the files are named – COSMOS will find them for you.” It uses advanced Waves Neural Networks technology in order to analyze, auto-tag, and sort your entire collection of samples into one unified database where you can easily find everything. “COSMOS brings all the one-shots and loops on your hard drive into one easy-to-search place. And if you’re looking for more options, be sure to check out the ADSR Sample Manager, too. That’s the problem COSMOS aims to solve, and I’m looking forward to testing the software. ![]() ![]() But even so, finding a specific file can be a tedious task if you have hundreds of thousands of samples on your hard drive. a lot of patches woudnt come up.I try to keep my sample collection as tidy as possible, sorting all sample packs into folders by category (drums, orchestral, brass, etc.) and by sample label (Goldbaby, Wave Alchemy, 99Sounds, Flame Sound, etc.). since the search was by name of the file so if i need violin sfx. I tried a few apps that where targeting this sort of find prests and sounds and libraries but didnt work as i thought or where too usefull. but not sure if its usefull for music or loops. I also have a software called Metadigger for SFX (post sfx) and it has a tag browswer so i can type robot and a bunc of files come up even if the file name is hyrdralic movement1.wav since the metadata was added to say robot. similar for other synths but i do have one folder with all presets and in there divided per synth. for omni is the same and you do the dropdown menu user files and youll see the ones you want. U-he has its preset system so right click and put all the ones you like in there. i do use kontakt quickload and use the most useful ones.įor soundsets i use the synths i normally use and they pop up in the meny. but im afraid that in there its just by companyname or library name. Then a folder for orchestral libraries and another for other type of sample libraries. I have anything loops and individual samples into one folder and subcategorized per genre. And if I use a library a lot, I make a MIDI template for it. I prefer to load instruments within KK because the light guides work with most of them there, including instruments from other players than Kontakt. it's Kontakt only, and there are getting to be a lot of players. It's particularly useful for finding little freebies you've forgotten about. It takes time to set up Quickload, but after you do it, it is great. I also have categories for "pads" and "soundscapes," etc. I have a Quickload folder called "Rhythmic" so something like Signal can be there and also in a "Synth" category. So many libraries have different kinds of things within them. I like Quickload because you can put libraries in multiple categories. Tremendously useful to be able to audition presets without loading them, and to be able to search by category and have the parameters preset up to knobs. They are constantly adding more instruments and expansions. A company called Freelance Soundlabs offers NKS templates for things like Omnisphere and Falcon so I've bought a lot of them.
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