Snial
Well-known member
Hi folks,
A while back I obtained a PowerBook 1400cs (now 1400c ), partly to play around with hardware based MIDI sequencing. I found that my copy of Cubase Lite didn't really run properly on the PowerBook 1400, but a month or so later I came across a MacFormat UK CD for January 2000 which contained a free, full version of emagic's MIcroLogic Fun. It's cut-down from their other projects because it can only handle 16 MIDI channels (and no audio), but is more than capable of substituting for Cubase Lite as it works in a very similar way and has equivalent (actually, better) features.
Because Apple bought out emagic a couple of years later and their product Logic™ is their current flagship audio application, MicroLogic Fun is (in my opinion) a valuable piece of Digital Archeology, I spent some time tracking down permission from one of the developers of the original MicroLogic Fun, Felix Bertram who put me in contact with Markus Fritze who is currently a Sr. Software Engineering Manager at Apple Inc.
The application is now available on Macintosh Garden. I hope you find it useful.
https://macintoshgarden.org/apps/micrologic-fun-404b
A while back I obtained a PowerBook 1400cs (now 1400c ), partly to play around with hardware based MIDI sequencing. I found that my copy of Cubase Lite didn't really run properly on the PowerBook 1400, but a month or so later I came across a MacFormat UK CD for January 2000 which contained a free, full version of emagic's MIcroLogic Fun. It's cut-down from their other projects because it can only handle 16 MIDI channels (and no audio), but is more than capable of substituting for Cubase Lite as it works in a very similar way and has equivalent (actually, better) features.
Because Apple bought out emagic a couple of years later and their product Logic™ is their current flagship audio application, MicroLogic Fun is (in my opinion) a valuable piece of Digital Archeology, I spent some time tracking down permission from one of the developers of the original MicroLogic Fun, Felix Bertram who put me in contact with Markus Fritze who is currently a Sr. Software Engineering Manager at Apple Inc.
The application is now available on Macintosh Garden. I hope you find it useful.
https://macintoshgarden.org/apps/micrologic-fun-404b