


This will make the player work much faster due to not using the same hard drive to write and read. Delete the Content folder on your computer.

Install all the libraries to your internal hard drive.After multiple messages with Customer Support I found a workaround: For example, the video shows OT installing to an external hardrive but this does not work atm. First of all there are no tutorials of how to do it correctly and the only video showcasing "the player" by OT is a complete lie. Now as I mentioned in the review, the weakest aspect by far is the installation. How to install content to external harddrives? However, at this stage it is very frustrating to work with. Therefore I would say, with substantial amount of work on improving compatibility of the player and enabling more control of the installation location (like NI or Izotope do it), the Sine player could be great. I have the impression that the algorithm behind the scenes has been improved compared to the Kontakt version.The library selection screen and how this player unites all of the OT libraries into one place just like the Vienna libraries is a great addition (so far there are only 3 libraries but I am certain we will see the metropolis and berlin series ported to this player).The interface is oversimplified at the cost of dynamics and map controls of the Kontakt version.Despite having over 10GB of free RAM, I constantly run into the "Audio Production Error" ( see image) The instrument installation process is a complete mess and the Customer support seems to know little about how to actually fix it.So I have been experimenting with the newish Sine Player from Orchestral Tools in light of the free upgrade for Metropolis Ark I users to the Sine Player version and let me tell you.Ī complete buggy mess of a plugin but a step in the right direction:
