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System Requirements

TruePianos system requirements vary, depending on the TruePiano module used. The future updates to the TruePiano Core engine will most likely affect these requirements. Below are the estimations based on the current version of TruePianos.

Windows requirements      Mac requirements
Windows 2000/ XP or newer
1GHz Pentium 3 or Athlon CPU
128 MB of free RAM
VST host (e.g. Cubase, Sonar, energyXT)
Soundcard with proper ASIO drivers
    
Mac OS X 10.4 or newer
Power PC G4 1 Ghz or any Intel based Mac
128 MB of free RAM
AU/VST/RTAS host (e.g. Logic Audio, Cubase, ProTools)
  
 
To use TruePianos with all features enabled, the following minimum configuration is recommended:
 
Windows recommended      Mac recommended
2.5-3 GHz Single-Core or 1.5 GHz Multi-Core CPU or faster
256 MB of free RAM or more
    
Power PC G5 or any Intel Multi-Core based Mac
256 MB of free RAM or more

Basic Screen

This is a short overview tour of TruePianos with screen shots. The front graphic interface looks like this:

The piano keyboard (which reacts to your mouse as well), basic controls, Options and About buttons, as well as the functionality to switch to a different piano module and a preset. TruePianos consists of multiple modules and presets. Each module represents a significantly different variant of a piano sound, while the presets change the piano character without affecting the basic properties of the piano. The hierarchy is as follows:

    Module A
  • Preset 1
  • Preset 2
  • ...
  • Preset n
    Module B
  • Preset 1
  • Preset 2
  • ...
  • Preset n
    Module C
  • Preset 1
  • Preset 2
  • ...
  • Preset n

Advanced Screen

Clicking the advanced interface button, or on the interface header - will bring the advanced interface up:

Here you can see the advanced preset selector, as well the sliders to control the individual parameters of the sound such as keyboard sensitivity, dynamic response of the piano, release time of the notes, tuning and the volume.

Options Screen

You can access options screen by clicking Options button in the lower right corner of the interface. Also, when you run the software for the first time, you will see the Options screen. Do not quickly pass it by. Your further piano experience depends on how well you will set up the dynamic response of your keyboard.

For my CME UF8 keyboard I find values -20...-17 to be close to optimal for my playing style, for Yamaha keyboard the slider should be around zero. Please, tune it to match your keyboard - just keep playing, and if it plays too difficult - move the slider to the left, otherwise if the notes come too bright, move the slider to the right. When you are finished, press 'Save current plugin state as default' and then 'Close'.

Additionally, you have options to turn on Sympathetic Resonance, Increased Polyphony mode, or the support for dual core processors. Note, that some applications (such as Cakewalk SONAR) have their own way of handling multi core processors, which depending on your setup, may not work very well together with TruePianos dual core support turned on. Since nobody has yet defined a standard of how the processor CPU time should be managed on multi core workstations, we invite you to check these options and find the best balance of quality vs performance on your system.

The Sound

Please, visit our demos page to listen how TruePianos modules sound.