On Thu, Jan 7, 2010 at 8:40 AM, Julien Claassen <julien@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > Hi! > I'm just waring with a gs3 setup. I got samples and .gig files seperately, > now I'm supposed to import them. Here's the relevant excerpt from the guide: > Right-click in the sample window and choose "Replace all samples in all > folders". > In the "Replace all samples" window, set the Root Directory to the folder > containing the .wav-samples. > Check the "Match samples by name to .wav/.dlx files anywhere under the root > directory > Click on the "Replace" button. > After all samples are replaced, choose "Save" under the "File" menu. It works, at least in my experience, but it's never been an easy process so I've only tried it once or twice and that was a LONG time ago... IIRC there are also a LOT of extra steps you'll have to go through if you want to map multiple samples to the same key vs velocity or anything complicated like that. For instance, even a simple setup where you just have a wave file because you take you gig file and extracted certain samples, or just have samples you want to use, and then want to map that wave into a gig at specific keys, etc., then it gets very work flow oriented, but it's only mildly complicated. > > If GigEdit can do this, there's another question: Can I start a LinuxSampler > engine on my system and allow someone to use it from the outside? IOr do I > better compile/install everything necessary here and grant ssh access? Don't know as I no longer use LS. Good luck, Mark _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user