![]() ![]() ![]() When you look at one of the MUX presets, you’re looking at the Front Panel. You can choose an External Audio Editor, edit Preferences, access the Clipboard, and much more. That last icon is used for many other settings, and you can configure just about anything you’d like. There is a third way to get there as well: right click on the background of MUX (between the control sections), and then click Editor/Show Deep Editor. You can also get there by clicking the last icon, and then in the Editor section, select “Show Deep Editor”. This is where you can set up the modular configuration to your liking. This will bring you to the “Deep Editor”. To get to the modular section, click the second-to-last icon at the top. What you first see is the Front panel, and the basic controls for that particular preset. When you first load MUX, the default preset is called “Basic Synth”. This means you could have it loaded on something like a CD/DVD or USB jump drive. One great feature is that MUX doesn’t install anything to the PC outside of its own folder. Installation was very easy, and uses a key protection scheme. For my review, I tested the VST plugin on my PC. MUX is included as part of MuLab for PCs and Macs, and is also available separately as a PC-only VST plugin. It is a VST host, modular synth, and effect plugin all rolled into one. It is actually much more than a standard modular synthesizer. MUX is their versatile modular synthesizer plugin. MuTools is the software company behind MuLab and MuVerb. It is actually much more: a VST host, modular synth, and effect plugin all rolled into one. MUX is MuTools’ versatile modular synthesizer plugin. ![]()
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AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. Archives
March 2023
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