Hey, you never know. Seeing that Rings was part of Elements, I guess it’s possible. I hope we finally see the new Clouds soon.

I’ve very excited about the Supercollider bubble the Norns is about to inspire!

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Since the man himself does drop in from time to time, he might speak to that, but knowing that quote and seeing how Tides 2018 is laid out, I kind of wonder if he was talking about the at-the-time-unannounced new Tides when he said that.

This thread has reached its tipping point… I wonder if there is any subject this forum can’t turn into consumerism and lusting after new objects.

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the Democracy thread doesn’t seem to have gone there ^-^

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…yet. :wink:

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I’m not sure :thinking: Gibson is going bankrupt but Fender is beating expectations.

yes there is a saturation happening in eurorack.

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can’t wait for the next big music thing(s)

https://www.musicthing.co.uk/modulegenerator.html

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Coming next from Music Thing Modular is a noise-reducing sample and hold module that is inspired by John Cage, with vactrols.

:ok_hand:

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Fat vape? I think you’ve been beaten to that by the Soma PIPE!

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And I think I have a good idea what it sounds like without ever hearing it.

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I agree. I’m not a fan of the cramped Eurorack format or (lack of) power, and hate that it has become a byword for modular synthesis in general, but there’s never been a better or cheaper time to get into modular than now.

Personally I’ve noticed that modules seem harder and harder to sell these days… one needs to really drop prices down to be able to sell (at least with “less exciting” modules). Once those 50€ behringer eurorack modules come out…

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I’m eagerly waiting for it to tip. Right now there are too many modules that are not built to last.

I strongly believe that the likes of Cwejman, Birdkids, Macbeth and other companies with high quality products will be the only ones to survive.

Could you elaborate here? I don’t own any Cwejman, Birdkids, or Macbeth yet I’ve had almost zero problems with any of my modules in the few years I’ve owned them. Have you had many issues yourself?

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Yes sure.

There are currently a lot of makers who are trying to stay competitive and using cheap solutions to do that. This often results in the use of cheaper components that have a lower life expectancy.

This is not necessarily a bad thing, but at the same time: when you spend 400/500 on a module it’s a bit unfair to find out the components are the cheapest out there.

I have had issues yeah. I think quality control is one of the biggest issues in euro right now. Both on the software (I’m looking at W/) and hardware side.

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I haven’t started working in Euro but I’m curious, do you have specific examples of hardware failures? And do you have any experience making/producing modules yourself? How have those experiences helped you form your opinion?

In defense of w/, it’s common to ship a piece of hardware with very functional but potentially buggy software because there are only so many use cases that can be tested before public release, or at least that’s how I understand it. I see bug fix releases and improvements for software and firmware quite often. But I also don’t have one (a w/) so I’m not exactly familiar with your specific issue.

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