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| | Korg Triton Pro (Site not responding. Last check: ) |
 | | The bare-bones Triton comes with a "full load" of data for Program and Combination banks A-D. (Apparently it initially offered less than complete C and/or D banks as Programs and/or Combinations, because my Triton came with a "replacement disk" to be used in place of one of the two installation disks. |
 | | So, whereas the Triton itself helps manage the comparatively few EXB expansion boards, and since adding or removing such boards is comparatively rare, the potential for more frequent changing of sample RAM makes it necessary to have it be easy to frequently change the "slots" used for patches that use sample RAM. |
 | | Since the Triton comes with a built-in sampler, the only other hardware I'd probably ever need to do the most wonderful stuff I can currently fantasize about is a digital mixer (to handle acoustic parts, to mitigate the 16-track limit, etc.), but even that can, in theory anyway, by handled by a sufficiently muscular PC. |
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