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Waveformless Review Sometimes a plug-in comes along where mere audio or video demos really aren't enough. Sure, you can get a general idea of the sound of an instrument or plug-in, but with some plug-ins, it's as much about the process as it is the end results.
Sonic Charge's latest release, Pemut8, is a perfect example of this kind of plug-in. More on that later. That's a good question. It's hard to describe Permut8 without using vague terms like 'audio destroyer' or 'glitch machine', but those don't really do it justice.
The reason is, although there may be tons of glitch and buffer effects out there, no one has quite done it in the same way Sonic Charge has with Permut8. Permut8 was inspired by the lofi tastiness of 12-bit digital devices from the 80's. It's based around a 12-bit digital delay with a variable sample rate from 0 to 352k. That doesn't sound all that impressive on its own, but what makes Permut8 different is it allows you to switch on and off different 'operators'in the modeled processor that further effect the sound. Depending on the operation you carry out, you can get reverse effects, beat repeater/buffer effects, comb filtering, flanging, bitcrushing, and more. Add to this filter, saturation, feedback and other effects to apply to the signal as a whole and you have some serious sound-mangling firepower under the hood here.
INSTALLATION When you purchase Permut8, you simply select 'REGISTER' from the pulldown menu at the top of the interface and enter the serial number you received. DOCUMENTATION Permut8 has very basic documentation in the form of pop-up windows that come up the first time you launch the plug-in. This is enough to get you messing around, but if you really want to understand Permut8, you're going to need to crack the full manual, which is available as a PDF. The manual is well-done and easy to follow, which is important, as this isn't the most obvious plug-in to figure out at first. INTERFACE The topmost part of the interface consists of a pulldown menu where you'll find initialize and randomize commands, save and load, links to the manual and pop-up tutorials, etc. Additionally, there is a two-digit display that allows you to select different banks, each of which contains several presets. I'm just going to get this out of the way and say the current preset management system kind of stinks.
Why force you to save entire banks? Let's please just have an alphanumerical display where we can see preset names and select sounds independent of banks. Perhaps they were trying to replicate some of the archaic methods of preset management on old devices, but I think this is one area where users will forgive you for taking some liberties in bringing it into the present. Next to the preset selection are switches that allow you to control certain parameters via MIDI keys, opening the door to more real-time use.
The majority of the interface is taken up by the sound parameters themselves. On the left hand side you'll find INPUT trim (with a limiter), OUTPUT level and CLIP mix, a FILTER that varies form LOWPASS to HIGHPASS and can be placed in various points in the signal chain, and a FEEDBACK parameter which can be used to produce everything from comb filtering effects to digital shrieks. To the right of this is where the real action takes place, however. Here you will find the two INSTRUCTION sections. These run in series and allow you to turn on and off different 'bits' to create rhythmic effects, while the OPERATORS control the various ways in which the READ and WRITE buffer interact. I know that all probably sounds like a bunch of vague nonsense, but I promise you it makes sense once you've messed around with it for awhile.
Spend some time selecting different OPERATORS and switching the various bits on and off just to see what it does. That's part of the appeal of this plug-in that I hinted at earlier.
Sonic Charge made a brave choice to make the interface for Permut8 something that is not immediately obvious when you use it. That's not a failure on their part (aside from preset management), but instead is aimed at encouraging you to mess around without knowing exactly what you're doing until something just clicks.
To that end, you can even alter the bits by adjusting the HEX readout if you want to feel even further removed from knowing what you're doing. At the very bottom you'll see a graphical representation of the READ and WRITE buffers and the SYNCable CLOCK FREQ which selects the speed at which the INSTRUCTION sections do their thing. You can also turn off the SYNC and freely adjust the frequency for truly out there effects. THE VERDICT I'll cut to the chase and say that I absolutely love this plug-in. With that said, I also believe this is not for everyone. Sure, it ships with 300 presets which are all nice enough, but to my mind, this isn't a preset user's plugin. This is one for people who like to tweak and experiment until they come across that perfect little touch of audio magic.
In many ways, working with Permut8 feels like working with some bizarre, circuit-bent device, and indeed the types of sounds it can produce are not far removed from that at all. But as I said in the beginning, this is a plug-in where the process of creating new effects is part of the appeal. Even if you have no idea what you're doing, it's a blast to randomly flip switches and dials to see what the result is.
To that end, this seems like a plug-in that's built for live performance. Map some parameters to your MIDI controller, and tweak away.
The sound quality of Permut8 is a nice meeting of the digital and analog worlds. The analog processing section (INPUT/OUTPUT, FILTER, FEEDBACK) really does lend a bit of analog-style warmth to the occasionally harsh digital sound of INSTRUCTIONS section. And the digital section is everything you'd hope it would be. All sorts of crazy digital distortions and manipulations are possible with rhythmic precision and an interface that really feels like working on a weird bit of old hardware.
And if you're REALLY a tweaker, an artificial terminal comes up when you click on the plug-in name that you can apparently operate as an actual assembly terminal of some sort. This is a bit above my geek-level, so I haven't messed with it myself, but just the idea of putting it in there is pretty awesome, I love it when a developer doesn't 'dumb down' their products! So who needs to check out Permut8? Obviously anyone into experimental music is going to love this. Likewise, IDM and dance music producers looking for edgy effects are going to eat this up. I also think people who do live PA sets and the like would have a lot of fun with this. You very well may have an entire plug-in folder full of glitchy plug-ins, but I guarantee you don't have anything like this.
Spend an hour with the demo and you'll figure out rather quickly whether it's the sort of thing you'll enjoy or not. But for those who will enjoy it, I feel confident they're going to love it dearly.
When our products 'forgets' the registration it usually has to do with an access problem to the registry (Windows) or preference file (Mac). Please check if If you make any changes to the preference dialog in MicroTonic, is that information kept if you restart?
If not, then for some reason, you do not have access rights to write to the registry as needed. If you are running under a restricted account, you could try to relax the restrictions temporarily until you registered MicroTonic (like setting your self as administrator). If you want to look into the problem in more detail, here is the path to the registry key: HKEYCURRENTUSER Software NuEdge Development SonicCharge. Hi Fredrik, although I'm on Win7 I always run anything with admin rights. I also disabled the UAC on my machine.
The registry key you mentioned is set and has two binary values, 'Data' and 'ssc2salt' and I guess one is supposed to contain the encoded registration. I just opened µTonic again after looking in the registry and it was in demo mode again. I entered the reg details and the 'Data' value changed. I will keep track of it the next few weeks. The odd thing is that it doesn't loose the reg always, for a few weeks everything is fine and one day it's gone out of the blue.
I'm an IT professional and know my computer well;) - µTonic is the only VST that does this, even Synplant doesn't seem to have that problem. I would prefer if the reg data and config was written to a file anyway - though I'm on Win, I really hate the registry stuff.;). Well, this is odd. Today I once again had to enter the reg info. And this time twice in a row. I was working in Ableton, inserted the µTonic Drum Rack which uses the multi-out version and was asked for the reg again.
I just didn't enter them but closed Ableton. Then I fired up energyXT (with admin rights, context menu run as admin), opened the single out version, entered the reg, restarted energyXT and tried multi and single out versions and everything was fine. Then I started Ableton again and inserted the drum rack and I was asked for the reg again???!! I entered the reg, this time right away in Ableton and now it seems to work. Well, at last for a few days. Is there any problem when using the single and multi out versions in turns?
Btw.: I exported the registry entries before and after entering the reg data. If that helps I can email that to you. editOK, it seems it has something to do with using different DAWs. In Ableton everything was fine first, then I tested energyXT and it was in demo again.
As if the reg just counts for one DAW at a time. I can reproduce that everytime now.
Regging in eXT-MT doesn't work in Ableton and the other way around/edit. Would love to see the registry entries thanks. Send them to support@soniccharge.com. The only incompatibility that we know of which erases the registration data was between version 1 and version 2 of MicroTonic. But version 3 uses a totally separate 'chunk' for its registration data. Just for safety measure, could you please double-check that you only have version 3.0.1 installed and no other MicroTonic.dll on your entire hard-drive. Haven't you beta-tested for us by the way?
I recognize your handle. I can't rule out that a beta-version of MicroTonic could corrupt the registration data even if it is just scanned and never launched. Wrote: Anything? It's been over 2 months now. I am really sorry.
Time flies amazingly fast. I did check your registry data, but it didn't shed any new light on the matter. The only thing I could see was that the 'demo dump' was unregistered and the 'full dump' was registered. Apart from that all registry data was identical.
It looks like MicroTonic has just unregistered itself, and the only occasion where that can happen is when it fails to validate the registration key. Either because the key data is invalid or because the 'system identifier' has changed. Neither of which makes much sense to me under the circumstances you describe. My plan was to finish a MicroTonic 3.0.2 beta that you could try. As far as I remember I haven't changed anything concerning registration codes but the betas include traces that are helpful. However, as MT 3.0.2 was put on hold for some more urgent work, the only thing I can offer you right now is the beta of MT 3.0.1 that will send us the trace logs. I need to change the expiration date though, which means a few hours of rebuilding (I know, crazy).
I'll get back to you tomorrow if I have a beta-build that works. Hi everyone and especially Magnus and Fredrik, thanks to great support including a special logging build for me, we figured it out eventually. It was (of course;)) a system setting at my end: energyXT was running in Win XP compatibility mode (don't know why, didn't notice.), while all my other DAWs where running as native Win 7 applications. That made MT3 calculate different computer IDs for eXT and the other DAWs causing the need to reg MT3 everytime I fired it up inside eXT. So, thanks again for looking into this and figuring it out!!
Milan aka R.A.W. done-and-ready-to-be-closed.
Wrote: well, then i can't help in this case. On my machine it was the compatibility setting of one of the DAWs. If that doesn't help on your end, it has to be something different. Yeah i tried to look into my fl studio files and it wasnt in compatiblity mode. Doe you think it may be because of the settings of uTonic? And do you have any id if i can just uninstall uTonic and reinstall it.
J tillman cancer and delirium raritan. Or will i then loose all my sounds in my projects? Hope one of the admins can shed a little bit more light into this for me.