<< Previous Message Main Index Next Message >>
<< Previous Message in Thread This Month Next Message in Thread >>
Date   : Mon, 14 Jan 2002 16:20:16 -0500 (EST)
From   : Victor Rozanov <vic792r@...>
Subject: Re: Anyone remember a music system?

Straight IMHO.

There absolutely no reason to use that old sequenser software nowadays.
It can be easily outperformed by any $100  keyboard from any toys store.
And also I think there are no worm feelings about that software.
It was not that brilliant like the other titles on the BBC are.

IMHO again.

Cheers,

Victor.



On Mon, 14 Jan 2002, Kris Adcock wrote:

> Date: Mon, 14 Jan 2002 09:42:31 -0000
> From: Kris Adcock <krisa@...>
> To: 'BBC list' <bbc-micro@...>
> Subject: [BBC-Micro] Anyone remember a music system?
>
> Morning all,
>
> Many, many years ago, when the universe was young, men were real men, small
> furry things from alpha century ... etc ... and I was about 7, a friend lent
> me a music composition program for the Beeb. All I can remember about it was
> that it had some very impressive (for a 7-year-old, anyway) demo files which
> came with it. One was called RONDO (which was the Turkish March by Mozart),
> and was in about 5 separate files. There was an actual composition bit, then
> a kind-of playlist bit, etc. I only had it for a week, as my friend wanted
> it back and I didn't know how to beat copy protection at the time. Does
> anyone reckon they know what this software was called? And is it available
> on any of the usual archives?
>
> Cheers,
>
> Kris.
>
>
<< Previous Message Main Index Next Message >>
<< Previous Message in Thread This Month Next Message in Thread >>