![]() Next you’ll be telling us the earth is flat.Įven notes sequenced from an Atari st will igger an arp and record on sequencer simultaniously. ![]() But you don’t have to believe any of them, you can test for yourself.Įven notes sequenced from an Atari st will jitter. I can dig you up references going back decades talking about notes jittering, with no midi clock involved. The jitter figures are for MIDI notes, not clock. You will find figures posted by various users that show the amount of jitter their system has. where you can get links to a freeware tool that can be used to measure latency and jitter. Here’s a thread Free software measures MIDI latency and jitter. The thng you quoted says “often” which does not mean always and I’m willing to bet the source isn’t talking specificaly about MIDI.Īll MIDI synths have jitter, as do standad MIDI interfaces for computers.Even with no MIDI clock involved. You can’t just shift the whole thing back to compensate for the latency and have events line up because individual notes will be off by different amounts of time. ![]() You’ll find that recorded notes do not line up on the grid. All you have to do is sequence some notes on a hardware synth from your DAW and record the audio. Next you’ll be telling us the earth is flat.
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June 2023
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