

I’m not sure why I’m singling that out in particular, but it sounds way better than I expected it to. Nave has a terrific sounding tube overdrive. I’d argue that the UI is a bit more crowd-pleasing, although I love the WaveGenerator look and it’s curvy envelopes.

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VMWare Fusion has a feature called unity mode which integrates the Windows application windows into OSX's native window managing functions such as Mission. But if you're like me and want the real thing, I've setup a very lightweight virtual machine dedicated just for one note. It’s deep, but then so are the PPGs, and it sounds really good, but then so do the PPGs. Growly Notes is the closest program I have seen compared to OneNote. It’s not been updated for 2 years and it’s not AU, but this doesn’t seem to be an issue. Of what I’ve seen so far, Nave is amazing (I’m new to Nave). They’re all AU and I don’t think there’s ever been a PPG sale. Old threads on the forum here suggest that WaveMapper is the ‘easy’ one and nobody understands Phonem (prove me wrong, people!). I’ve used three of them (not Phonem) and they’re all quirky, annoying in part and sound fantastic. WaveGenerator was my first and remains my favourite (so far at least), although I think Infinite is Herr Palm’s favourite. The PPGs are all different, deep, and plagued by an annoying presets system. It’s kind of a different topic, but I love iWAVESTATION. IWAVESTATION is a bit of an outlier, as a ‘wave sequencer’ synth. This app will help you easily keep your mind. You will have a daily planner, to do list, diary, journal, habit tracker, agenda, calendar, countdown, quick simple note, Apple Watch app and more. SynthScaper and Mitosynth both use samples and offer impressive sound processing and modulation options but to the best of my knowledge, neither one does things the wavetable way. Quickly organize your mind and life across iPhone, Apple Watch, iPad and Mac. I suppose Animoog is a fairly idiosyncratic implementation of wavetable synthesis. It offers more modulation options and variation in sound than you’d get with individual samples. You have filters too, and envelopes, lfos, all of that stuff, but this movement ‘through’ the wavetable is a different way of doing things. WaveGenerator illustrates this rather well with a dot moving around on a 16x16 wave grid. A wavetable synth is capable of ‘sweeping’ through these different samples - different locations in the wavetable - to ‘change the oscillator’ over time and thus give your sound movement over time. An example might be ‘64 single cycle waveforms at different points through a filter sweep’ (but they could be anything). In my fractured understanding, a wavetable is a group of related samples. Record voices and videos for vivid presentation. Take photos as illustration of what was happening.
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Key Features: - Create notes with rich texts, tables, images, audio and movie clips. Wavetables can be a little confusing! I’m still a little confused by them, and very much open to schooling. It helps you to easily create notes from your life, efficiently manage your daily tasks, and enrich your Note-taking experiences. I think the PPGs and Nave are the only true ‘wavetable’ synths of those you mention.
