David Smith wrote:I have tried more than once to get this to work. At least on the Mac, I cannot get N2 sounds to be active in N3. When choosing a new instrument on a part, the library shows with instrument names in it. (Anyone know what path to change or sample files to move, etc. to incl N2 without impeding N3 libs .prox ?) Would just like to have the add'l library to use.
The N2 and N3 versions of the London Symphony Orchestra (LSO) VSTi instruments are in the same place on my Mac, with the same path that
ulrik listed, and I am running OS X 10.6.6 on a 2.8-GHz 8-core Mac Pro with 8GB of memory (8x1G) . . .
The N3 samples are in the "Bundled" folder, and the N2 samples are in the "N2" folder . . .
I think that the N3 samples include some other instruments, as well . . .

The path for the Notion 3 sound libraries are specified in the Audio tab of Preferences . . .
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IMPORTANT: I did some experiments with the Audio Buffer Size, and it needs to be left at the default value of 256 Samples if you are controlling Notion 3 with Digital Performer 7 via ReWire, because higher values cause latency and timing problems . . . ]

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IMPORTANT: The path for the VSTi sound libraries for IK Multimedia products like Miroslav Philharmonik, Sample Tank 2.5, and so forth are set via the user interface for those products rather than via the Audio tab of Notion 3 Preferences, where if you look above the pop-up dialog box in the following screen capture you will see the word "PREFS", which is what you click to show the pop-up dialog box. All the IK Multimedia VSTi products have this same interface, and it works but is quite annoying to use. However, the VSTi instruments are stellar, which is the important thing . . . ]

I think the user interface designers at IK Multimedia must either have huge displays or perfect vision, because it is virtually impossible to see much of anything, since everything is tiny and there is no way to zoom it, but I deal with it, and this appears to be the same way user interface design is done by the Propellerhead Software folks in Reason 5, which also has mostly tiny stuff . . .
I suppose that neither company (IK Multimedia or Propellerhead Software) thought that folks such as myself who watched "The Howdy Doody Show" before going to elementary school in the morning would be using their products at the dawn of the early-21st century to compose silly
DISCO songs about ladies underpants, really . . .
Really!