His point, though, was that we always think things from our own perspectives and expectations. This would be an example of me, doing just that. I can see the appeal of cooked format having almost zero overhead compared to a more complex player processing overhead. So.. that's where that line of thinking came from - haha (the demoscener or system pusher).
That's perfectly valid thinking, and I'm just-as-guilty of looking at things from my own "game-production" perspective. :oops:
You're right ... it's all just a case of trade-offs.
I'm pretty-confident that for general-purpose homebrew usage, any new driver should try to minimize both CPU and memory usage as much as possible, even if that has some effect upon the theoretical-best quality that the PCE might produce.
The System Card player certainly takes the same route!
But it wasn't hblank interrupt driven (from what I remember). It was timer interrupt + timed code. In other words, you couldn't do anything else. That was my point.
OMG, that's
horrible!
The only problem, is if no one keeps up with him and it's not apparent of where to find the older builds (of deflemask). It's not a big concern, but just something to point out.
It's definitely a valid concern. It would be sensible to archive old versions just-in-case they disappeared from his forum, and are needed in the future.
But ... I'm still hoping that he's going to be sensible-enough to keep the version-upgrades reasonably compatible.
As I said ... from what I've seen *so far*, everything for the last few versions can be handled by a few simple "if" statemants in the converter code.
This is my workflow for creating music for PCE and MSX:
1) I open up FruityLoops
OK, I'm curious enough to try it out.
Since you're the "music" guy around here, I figure that I'd better see what you're seeing on the screen if I'm going to even *think* about trying to improve the process.
It's on sale at the moment, down from $99 to $69 at Musician's Friend ... so I'll bite.
Just in case anyone else is interested, that price comes up on Google, and on the Musician's Friend "Special Deals" webpage, but the price jumps up to $99 when you go to order it.
I telephoned them, and they were happy to sell it to me at the $69 price ... so make sure to do that if you're interested in it.
But now I wish that I hadn't looked at Musician's Friend ... it's too easy to get sucked into all the pretty toys. There's a really good "upgrade" offer at the moment for my copy of Cakewalk Sonar.