![]() I have Dorico set to use the built in audio interface on my motherboard, and set to use a silent instrument profile, with MIDI going through virtual MIDI ports. I opened a bog standard version of Nero Video, drug my time code into it, then exported it as mp4 with aac audio. I grabbed a stripe from the website I posted above to save myself waiting to generate my own in real time. The good news is that I was able to do it without much fuss using the Anatek Box. Sorry, I had not realized modern DAWs on Windows machines can’t just take the stripe from any old audio input and sync that way. Here I’ve got a classic Anatek SMP-7 MIDI patch bay with analog SMPTE conversion to an assortment of MIDI clock types that does the job, plus half a dozen ways to generate such a thing with my old Ataris and Steinberg or Emagic dongles. My bad…I’ve still got quite a bit of old kit laying around so it works for me, but it does require a box of some sort to convert the stripe into MTC that Cubase can sync with. More modern versions, and current audio/MIDI interfaces typically don’t support feeding an analog SMPTE signal straight into Cubase these days. I’m not sure about Studio One, but with my Cubase rig (Windows 10) it seems to go something like this… Out of curiosity I dug into an analog SMPTE track cludge for Dorico running in Dorico’s video player. As a Student it’s simply hard to afford all these programs even though I work as a waiter on the weekend and it’d be so awesome to be able compose music on an orchestral level with such an easy workflow without having to buy Cubase. ![]() Now I’ve found the perfect mix and all that it takes from here to success is some kind of tempo sync with Studio one. I’ve spent the last two months trying to get a whole setup in Dorico standalone but I had to accept that it’s a noation software and not a DAW. I understand that you have all kinds of schedules but if we could just get access to send to and recieve from the midi clock, that might already give enough room to create a workaround. It’d be lovely if you could answer, I have read from a lot of people in all kinds of forums that they are just waiting for this. ![]() But as someone who tried the Cubase Demo and just didn’t like it tbh I really wish for some features in upadte 2.3 like ReWire. ![]() Of course, it would be a nice treat for Cubase users if they had some extra features and absoluetly fair to give those to them by you because after all, you are company. Please don’t make us have to buy Cubase for this. I was reading some other posts and it said that you were aiming for a solution to sync up with cubase. Notion 6 does not have this problem because it uses ReWire to sync with DAWs (Notion 6 isn’t nearly as good as Dorico though <3). This works perfectly while i notate but because the Programs don’t sync there is no way for playback from Studio One stuff and Dorico stuff at the same time. send Midi data via loopMidi to Studio One where it get’s mixed with audio, puts the midi into Kontakt etc. Here is how my setup works (or not i guess) Here is a feature request which would make Dorico the perfect program in my opinion. First of all, I got to say that the 2.2 update solved a lot of issues on the way to making dorico what I was hoping for it to be, great Job, keep it going!
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