It is good to hear you are looking at doing some tutorials on video. One thing I forgot to mention is that a lot of people like to try to use stuff right away. So, I tried putting some modules together to see if I could understand how to use Audulus on a basic level. What I thought should have produced sound did not. I will try to reconstruct the patch to send it as an example. I did something with Audulus where it does not want to access that folder.
Making it easy to use is great. A lot of guitar players really like only three knobs on their pedals. Watch That Pedal Show for that type of thing. I know that is quite different than this environment but the principle of simplicity applies.
One feature I would like to see with Audulus is a grouping of modules. You already have it on the screen interface for tiles but not when you go to place larger modules.
Here is a patch where I added an audio out. The audio out did not output sound until I pressed the switch in the VCA tile. I think that must of been what was happening before. I made a video of it. I will see if I can post a link later. Test patch.audulus4 (147.5 KB)
Hi. I am new to Audulus just having installed Audulus 4 on my iPad. I found the Know Your Nodes series on YT. I am having a little trouble figuring thins out as the interface is a little different. I think I almost have it working from the first section of the 1st tutorial, just not quite. It looks like a node appears off to the left side of the screen but I cannot see it. And I might have figured out how to make a via module but am unsure of that as well. I would like to learn how to use this aspect of Audulus. It looks like it can accomplish a lot. Any help would be appreciated.
FYI I think that series is more geared to users that wish to make their own modules to use in A4. I’m like you and new to Audulus, I have been finding the SoundForMore Audulus tutorials a good introduction:
As well as the Wired Up With Mark series on the Audulus YT channel
You can download these here and just look through them, see how they’re built, and try to replicate them for practice.
I ended up calling the via a “tab” in this one, but that’s a pretty easy module to make - take and input and output node and either group them or create them inside of a module node, wire them together on the inside of the module, then pop back out and arrange where the I/O is on the panel of the module. If you look at the tab inside this tool kit, you’ll see it’s simpler than it sounds!
Being able to create your own modules is something that I would like to experiment with. Thanks for the yt link. I have gone through one or two of those SFM tutorials.
Audulus 3, but that is definitely the case. My intention with Know Your Nodes was more of an adjunct series that was meant to explore the node library and then slowly lost focus. Currently I took a year long break from using the iPad all together, so I am coming up to speed along with the rest of users.
@biminiroad 's Wired Up series is doing a great job at showing the current meta for building modules from nodes if anyone is in need of learning that skill. That’s where I am looking to find out the inside tips for how to build efficiently.
The nod3s look like a very interesting way to create your own patches. I imagine that the use of some larger modules that are available in the Audulus 4 library use a lot of CPU. I am currently using an iPad 6th gen. There are a couple of patches included with the factory patches that crash the app and shut it down.
I would like to be able create my own sub modules and modules from scratch. Not being able to make a simple Tab module shows me I am missing something in the process.
I can make some patches using the currently available modules and tiles so that part is not a problem.
Here is a video link to me trying to recreate a Tab module which was provided with the Submodules.zip file earlier in the thread.
I came back here to post that link! So, here it is and thanks for the reply!
I was trying to follow an old Audulus 3 tutorial which did not have that information. And I did not realize the purpose of the Lock icon - it was the one thing I did not try while checking out the options on my own.