Thanks for being willing to live on the bleeding edge by using this beta release!
Please report any problems or questions by email to:
avc@symbolicsound.com
As with any beta software, there is some chance that this new software could crash Kyma (and possibly your computer), so please backup your work frequently!
This public beta is for the
Macintosh only. Do not install this release if you use (or plan to use) a Windows computer. This will be supported soon (just not in this release).
Download the ZIP archive and expand it by double-clicking its icon. Open the
AVC Beta
folder, and run the Flame firmware update found in the
Flame Update
folder. (To minimize problems, please disconnect all other
FireWire devices if at all possible. Also, please be sure that Kyma is not running. When the updating process has completed, remove power from the Flame for at least 10 seconds, plug it back in, and then restart your computer. (When you quit the update program, it asks whether you want to save; please save the file. If there are any problems with the update, this will help us diagnose what happened.)
If you would like to retreat to the old version of the Flame firmware, follow the same instructions as above, but use the most recent non-beta firmware update found on the kyma•tweaky.
The AV/C update provides a way to receive both audio and MIDI from other software running on your computer; it also makes it possible for you to send audio (but not MIDI) from Kyma to other software running on your computer.
To set the sample rate, use the
Audio MIDI Setup
in the
Utilities
folder of the
Applications
folder. The Flame will serve as the sample rate clock source for the
FireWire bus when Kyma is running. Be sure that the sample rate in the
Audio MIDI Setup
is the same as the sample rate within Kyma (where you set the sample rate in the DSP Status window).
Each of your third-party programs should have a control panel or configuration window for specifying the audio and MIDI input and output devices. Some software can work with only one input and one output device. If you want to use the Flame and another audio device at the same time, you can create an
Aggregate Device within
Audio MIDI Setup
to create a virtual device which contains the inputs and outputs of both devices.
The
FireWire bus supports multiple audio streams. One of these streams is going to the Capybara (via the Flame); it contains 6 audio channels and one MIDI data connection (16 MIDI channels). Another stream is coming from the Capybara via the Flame and contains 6 channels of audio. (The MIDI output connection is currently unused, pending a planned firmware update to the Flame).
To access the audio output of third-party programs from inside Kyma, use the new
SoundFromExternalSource. (This Sound is found in
NewSounds.kym
included in the AVC Beta folder). In the parameter fields of the
SoundFromExternalSource, you can specify which of the 6 incoming channels this Sound should be listening to.
To send audio from Kyma to a third-party program, use the new
SoundToExternalDestination Sound anywhere in a Kyma signal flow graph or timeline. The parameters of a
SoundToExternalDestination include a Sound input and the output channel.
SoundToExternalDestination expects a mono input (it will output only the left channel of its input Sound).
- If you use the MotorMix, please keep it connected to the physical Capybara MIDI input and output. The MotorMix MIDI will merge with any incoming FireWire MIDI.
- Except for case of the MotorMix, you should not use both FireWire MIDI and the physical MIDI input on the back of the Capybara at the same time. (They will not merge correctly)
- MIDI output is not yet implemented (but this is planned)
Click
here to download the 070313 version.
--
KurtHebel - 21 Dec 2007