>>801
>I actually bought myself a whole collection of grooveboxes this year (MP7, MC505, MC307, MPC500, DR202, KO1, EM1, SP606, SP808, RM1X, SB246, QY100), and it's really taught me how expensive and how much of a hassle hardware really is in comparison to DAWs and trackers. And to add, I've since started using FLStudio 3.55 which has re-shifted my opinion on software trackers as it's a much more user friendly and intuitive software to use and to learn as a beginner in comparison to the more modern versions.
Replying to this post again, I'm on the verge of just coughing up the money for a Cirklon with the way my computer setup is. FL Studio has been my preferred way of working in the box, but I've never liked the feeling of using it in Linux. I've tried it through Wine and in a virtual machines, and it just feels off to me. I've also got it installed on my Windows partition, but the problem is that I don't like having to close everything and boot into Windows for that. And maybe it's just me, but I've never been good at finishing projects. I also never bothered learning any of the automation techniques.
I played around with Furnace a bit and really liked the workflow and bare-bones tracker interface, but there's no MIDI export function. It's also completely oriented around chip music, which is fine, but I'd like to also be able to input chords and everything. I'm a hardware synth guy, so it's sequencing I'm interested. If there was something out there with the same interface but made more for hardware integration and general composition, I'd switch to that as my main DAW in a heartbeat. in I looked into Renoise, but that's too far in the other direction for what I'd like. I then moved on to looking into hardware. I narrowly missed out on getting a Dirtywave M8. I was waiting for the day when they'd come back in stock, but when I went to place an order they were all sold out already. I think that might have been a blessing in disguise now. I don't care about any of the onboard synths or effects, and working polyphonically seems a bit fiddly. It's definitely possible to use it with external synths, but I don’t know how compatible they’d be with the table functions. There’s also no way to export a project to a MIDI file without an external script that only exports one channel at once. They seem pretty nice other than that.
I’m getting tired of software anyway, since there are too many distractions for me working on a computer. The problem is most hardware sequencers look like a pain to use, and I’m also probably going to end up need some mixing equipment on top of that. The Cirklon seems like it would definitely take time to learn but is perfectly cut out for hardware and has some really interesting features, especially with the aux event functions. But it would not only be a investment in time but money too. It’s a lot to shell out for something I’m not sure I’d connect with in terms of workflow. At least I could probably sell one for a decent price if I didn’t gel with it. Since there’s no way waiting list now and they aren’t as scarce as they used to be, I don’t know if that’s going to last though.