Check all the pics, is it weird photo editing or some sort of scam?
It looks like the pictures went through a background removal tool then the resulting pictures were pasted on top of a wood texture, with no regards to the original pictures’ orientation.
That would explain why in some pictures the article seems to be cut in half as well as the confusing perspective on most pictures.
Background removal and replacement.
Somewhat unrelated question: What does a standalone unit like that get you? Eventually, you would have to migrate the tracks to a PC or laptop anyway, so why not just use a laptop and your DAW of choice?
Having the pads is nice to have, but is really worth it?
What is the use case, is what I am asking. Is there a benefit for live performance?
Edit: Since this will likely attract other digital music folk, are there any good Lemmy communities to check out for music production?
The MPC is a standalone unit. It is a DAW so you don’t need a PC. You can make an entire song on it without ever needing a pc or external editing software, you can connect instruments mics right to it. It’s basically a portable studio.
You can even download updates, instruments, sample kits right on the unit.
It is annoying tho since they started adding features to the PC version of the software that aren’t available in the standalone versions. But you get access to them if you own the hardware.
If you find any let me know.
Looks like we need to make one then. Dunno how much traction it will get but it’s worth a shot.
There some stuff going on at Lemmy.studio but not very active.
Perhaps some filter to make it seem like it’s on a wooden desk instead of something else, perhaps a bed.
Reminds me I finally got rid of my Roland VS880EX 2 years ago. Had it since about 2000. That thing was a workhorse and it still worked fine but I was always disappointed I couldn’t put a bigger drive in it. With todays drives I could record 4 tracks at the highest quality for about a month straight but back in the day we had to shift data around just to work on a few songs at a time on it.