can renoise 32bit load 64bit vst ?
Yes, when running on a 64-bit operating system, Renoise 32-bit can load 64-bit plugins in sandboxed/bridged mode.
It’s not possible on a 32-bit operating system.
and vice versa
renoise 64bit 32bit vst’s ?
i am asking because of the final installation of renoise now. 32bit vs 64bit
i am on windows 7 with 64bit and have a few 32bit vsts
and vice versa
renoise 64bit 32bit vst’s ?
Of course
For what it’s worth, I’m on Windows 8 64-bit, but I still use Renoise 32-bit because a lot of my favourite VSTs are 32-bit only, and I prefer to avoid the sandboxing/bridging whenever possible. I also don’t need to use more than 3-4 GB of RAM (the 32-bit limit) for my projects, so it works out totally fine for me.
why do you avoid the sandboxing !? and sacrifing the speed advantage
why do you avoid the sandboxing !? and sacrifing the speed advantage
Sandboxing/bridging simply adds another layer of complexity between Renoise and the plugin, which means a little bit more RAM used, a little bit more CPU used when communicating back and forth with the plugin server process, and so on.
Every VST plugin I use is available in 32-bit — and many of the older ones are only 32-bit — so it makes sense for me to use 32-bit everywhere. Sandboxing simply isn’t necessarily at all in this case. Even though I am on a 64-bit OS, I’m not really sacrificing anything serious here by running Renoise 32-bit.
Another problem with the sandboxing process is that it prevents some VST plugins from communicating with other instances of themself, so plugins which can route audio between themselves do not work properly, for example.
Of course, all of this simply depends on what you are doing. Install whichever version of Renoise you think is most appropriate for your own workflow. Either way, 32-bit or 64-bit, with sandboxing or without it, Renoise still runs just fine, and I doubt you’d notice any serious differences anyway.
do you run any other DAW ?
i am jumping between fl studio, reason, reaper, live9, S1 and reaktor (not a DAW i know) and i can’t settle to one of them because of many reasons. i am in long droning sounds like here (my recordings) https://soundcloud.com/anke-auto/dronos-01052015
but i am not loving using ready made synth so i use fl studio for mangling my own field recordings but fl studio is …ehm… very strange.
the best soft/hardware maybe Kyma but expensive and only a 2 person company (what if the company is going to breakdown - support etc.)
do u think i can go with these claims in renoise ?
do you run any other DAW ?
Nope. Only Renoise. But my own musical needs are quite basic, I guess.
do u think i can go with these claims in renoise ?
If you’re still testing the demo version of Renoise, then I think you should simply spend as much time as possible with it to make up your own mind. Everybody has different needs, so I can’t really tell you what’s good or bad for you.
If you’ve already purchased Renoise, well… I guess you’ve already seen something interesting in the software that made you want to explore it further?
i have already purchased renoise because of reducing myself to “one can do all” product and not jumping around
like a gummiball.
it can be bridged so yes!