One closeup photo confirms that these Macs were indeed running Mac OS X and not a flavor of Windows, while a second shows a lone IBM ThinkPad looking a bit out of place among the Apple-dominated lab. One closeup photo confirms that these Macs were indeed running Mac OS X and not a flavor of Windows, while a second shows a lone IBM ThinkPad looking a bit out of place among the Apple-dominated lab. The first thing you must do to start the process of making the UDF Software work on the Mac is to install OS X. At this point, you should be installing OS 10.2 (Jaguar) since it is the latest and greatest version of the operating system. However, if you already have version 10.1 on your system you are set. NOTE: OS X is not an optional requirement. The Apple Design Awards (ADAs) is an event hosted by Apple Inc. At its annual Worldwide Developers Conference.The purpose of the event is to recognize the best and most innovative Macintosh and iOS software and hardware produced by independent developers, as well as the best and most creative uses of Apple's products. The Stereo Pipeline. The NASA Ames Stereo Pipeline (ASP) is a suite of free and open source automated geodesy and stereogrammetry tools designed for processing stereo imagery captured from satellites (around Earth and other planets), robotic rovers, aerial cameras, and historical imagery, with and without accurate camera pose information.
Peak sounds warm and rich with filthy, biting overdrive. It's an eight-voice desktop polyphonic synthesiser with three New Oxford Oscillators for each voice. The synth has a resonant multi-mode analogue filter for each voice, and three distortion points in an analogue signal chain.
Peak’s design consultant was none other than Chris Huggett, the man behind Bass Station, Supernova, OSCar and many more legendary synths. Peak has its origin in the Bass Station II analogue monosynth, and Peak’s oscillators sound completely analogue by being high-quality NCOs (Numerically-Controlled Oscillators), but gain the flexibility of the digital domain with 60 digital wavetables.
Broaden out your electronic music, draw in new influences and take artistic risks. The modulation system puts the most frequently used assignments right at your fingertips in the main controls. More elaborate movements and secondary ‘via’ assignments are made just a few menu button presses away.
You can plug Peak into your Mac or PC via USB and start playing. It also has MIDI I/O on five-pin DIN ports, so you can connect your other MIDI gear. Oh, and did we mention it connects to modular systems via a CV modulation input?
Where does Peak fit in your set-up?
The Wavetable Editor unleashes the power of the wavetable oscillators. It features drawing tools and a Live Edit mode, so you can draw your own oscillator shapes and preview them in real time. Audio import lets you load in your own audio to be used as the oscillator waveform. Included is a curated selection of space-themed audio from the NASA sound library, plus exclusive content from production giants Noisia.
Music making is all about the journey, and we’re always looking for new ways to inspire you along the way. That’s why we’ve created the Sound Collective. Receive free versions of the most innovative software instruments and creative FX from developers we admire, as well as discounts to help you make the most of third-party software, exclusive to Novation customers. All you have to do is register your Novation gear, and one offer will be featured in your Novation account every couple of months.
NASAView is a PDS archive product display program that runs on multiple platforms in a GUI environment. This application was built using the Label Library Light (L3), Object Access Library (OAL) and the XVT Development Solution for C package. Label Library Light parses PDS ODL labels and creates an in-memory representation of the label information. The Object Access Library uses the parse tree and accesses the actual PDS object. The XVT Development solution supplies the cross-platform GUI support and an object-oriented environment.
Version | 3.18.0 |
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Release Date | October 1, 2018 |
License | Public Domain |
Programming Language | C |
Source Code | Not available |
Package Size | 6.5 MB (approx.) |
Support Software Required | X-Windows, Motif |
Platform | Comment |
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Solaris | Built and tested on Solaris 10. Note: Solaris builds will be discontinued after version 3.18.0 of NASAView. |
Linux 32-bit Linux 64-bit | Built and tested 32-bit binary on Red Hat 7.3. Built and tested 64-bit binary on Red Hat Enterprise 4. See Motif issue note below. |
Windows | Built and tested within a virtual Windows XP environment with Service Pack 3 running on a Windows 7 platform. Tested on a Windows 7 platform as well. For Windows XP users, at least Service Pack 2 is required. |
Macintosh | Built on High Sierra and tested on El Capitan. PowerPC no longer supported as Mac's compiler no longer allows building of PowerPC executables. |
2018-10-01, MC(EN) Updated;
This is a maintenance release of NASAView which includes a fix to properly run on Mac OS-X High Sierra platforms.
For more details, please see the Release Notes section of the NASAView documentation.
Newer versions of Linux (e.g., RedHat, CentOS, etc.) are shipping with version 2.3.X of the Motif library. The Linux binaries listed above only support version 2.2.X of Motif. In our testing of NASAView with the newer version of Motif, we have discovered and reported a bug in Motif which causes a refresh issue when displaying labels through the Full Label menu option in NASAView. Once an official release of Motif that includes fixes for these bugs is available, we will test and release an updated version of NASAView that supports this newer version of Motif.