Autodesk 3D Graphics Package Adds Audio Controls for Animation

Guildford, U.K. Kinetix, the new multimedia business unit of Autodesk, today announced the immediate availability of an updated release of its 3D Studio MAX. Autodesk claims that Release 1.1 of Studio MAX is the most fully featured 3D modelling and animation package available for PCs.

Lending some weight to that claim from an audio developer’s point of view is the inclusion of a novel feature: four new animation controllers for using WAV audio files to drive animation parameters directly. Other new features of the version upgrade include Windows ’95 compatibility, and a number of new renderers and modelling modifiers.

The new version will be shipped free to all registered 3D Studio MAX customers.

Recoton Settles Labor Dispute

Lake Mary, FL. Recoton Corp., the parent company of numerous North American audio accessory and consumer audio product brands, has settled its labor dispute with Local 184 (Orlando, FL) of the Glass, Molders, Pottery, Plastics & Allied Workers Union. The company and the union jointly announced that they reached agreement yesterday for a new three year contract. Details of the new agreement have not been disclosed.

Recoton Corp. brands include Advent®(R), AR®/Acoustic Research®, Calibron®, Discwasher®, Jensen®, Parsec®, Phase Linear®, Recoton®, Rembrandt®, SoundQuest® and STD®.

Mackie Designs Named Among Fastest Growing Tech Companies in Washington

Woodinville, WA. Console and mixer manufacturer Mackie Designs Inc. has been one of the ten fastest growing technology companies in Washington state over the past five years. That’s according to a study conducted by NASDAQ, Tiper Jaffray, US West, and the Washington Software and Digital Media Alliance.

“The Washington Technology Fast 50 Award” recognizes the top 50 technology companies in Washington, with rankings based on percentage growth in revenues from 1991 to 1995. Mackie Designs has grown from revenues of 3.8 million in 1991 to almost 64 million in 1995, representing a sales growth increase of 1583%.

“The tremendous growth of our company emphasizes the opportunities we have always believed to exist in the professional audio products market,” said CEO and President Greg Mackie.

Earlier this year, INC. Magazine rated Mackie #78 on its “INC.100” list of fastest-growing companies. That study considered all publicly held companies across all industry sectors, not just technology. No other professional audio manufacturer made the INC. list.

Although Mackie Designs’ growth so far has been fuelled exclusively by its extensive line of low-cost high-quality mixing systems, the company recently announced plans to diversify into other professional audio products by the end of 1996. At the summer National Association of Music Merchants (NAMM) show in July, Mackie previewed speaker systems (the 8020 High Accuracy Active Studio Reference Monitor) and amplifiers (M1200 Fast Recovery Series™ power amp).

“We believe that we can leverage the Mackie brand name into other products, and the tremendous response we received at NAMM definitely supports that theory,” stated Mackie.

WaveStream GM Synthesis Engine Licensed to Packard Bell

San Diego, CA. Brooktree Corp. announced today that it has licensed its WaveStream™ wavetable synthesis technology to Packard Bell NEC Inc. The deal will allow Packard Bell to bundle the software-only synthesis engine with its new Platinum Series computer systems.

WaveStream loads as a software module in Windows 95, and uses system memory to hold wavetable instrument descriptions. The instruments are read from disk as required from an 8MB sample library. WaveStream gives Packard Bell’s systems high-performance PC sound and the ability to play General MIDI compatible games and software, without the expense of additional sound hardware.

“We believe that WaveStream is the only software solution of its kind,” said Fred Kern, V-P of Product Marketing for Packard Bell NEC. “It gives full General MIDI compatibility, 32-voice polyphony, and the ability to customize a personal sound library depending on preferences and the requirements of the application.”

In addition to supporting games and educational titles, WaveStream can handle fullblown MIDI composition and sequencing. WaveStream’s inclusion of an MPU-401 emulation mode ensures compatibility with applications that function in a full or partial screen under Windows and support the GM standard.

InWorld Delivers Practical Tools for Java Audio

Sausalito, CA. Java™, the cross-platform programming language developed by Sun Microsystems, has been the biggest buzz in the web developer community for about a year. But until now, the the interest has focused on putting Java to work on animation, user interface, and transaction-processing applications.

Audio has been left out in the cold, mostly because there have been no convenient tools for accessing Java’s audio capabilities. And perhaps also because support for audio in Java is somewhat limited: for example, it currently supports nothing but 8 kHz mono sound files.

Bay area start-up InWorld VR Inc. has just started shipping a package of Java tools that could turn things around in a hurry. InWorld’s “Automatic Audio” is a bundle of sixteen pre-built Java audio applets (small programs that download and run automatically on any Java-enabled browser, such as the current versions of Netscape Navigator™ and Internet Explorer™).

“I’m a composer and a sound designer, not a programmer,” says InWorld Sound Designer Frank Still. “If I can get Java sounds onto a web page with our product, any audio engineer or professional will be able to do it too.” The proof that Still can cut it is found on InWorld’s demo pages.

The Automatic Audio package allows the web audio developer to embed sounds on a web page that will play automatically when the page is accessed, loop in the background, play when the user clicks on a graphic or hot spot on the page, or when she moves the mouse over a graphic. Some of the applets also combine audio with simple animation: for example, moving the mouse over a page element might cause an animation to run, accompanied by sound.

The development process is straightforward. Create a digital sound file using any familiar tool, such as a workstation or a PC with a sound card. Convert the file to 8-bit, 8 kHz mono in “.au” format (the generic Unix/Sun audio standard). Then put define a few parameters calling the InWorld applet and the sound file in the HTML code of your web page.

From a professional audio standpoint, the major limitation for InWorld’s technology is the low standard of audio supported. “That’s a problem with Java, we can’t do anything about it right now,” explains Still. “But Sun has said that they will add a range of audio formats to Java by the end of this year. We’ll be upgrading our applets as fast as Java lets us. But with careful design, you can get pretty decent results from 8-bit 8 kHz right now.”

The major advantage of Java applets over other technologies for implementing sound and music on web pages, such as streaming audio (RealAudio™, StreamWorks™) and MIDI players (Crescendo™, MIDPlug™) is that the user doesn’t have to obtain and install additional software. “If the user has a Java-enabled browser, they’ll get the audio, it’s as simple as that,” says Still. “Of course you still have bandwidth concerns, you have to keep the audio files as small as possible. But our applets are very low overhead, the code is really compact.”

Interest in the product has been running about 50/50 so far between skilled audio developers and general web practitioners who just want to get some sound effects onto a web page. For those who don’t have a way to create their own audio, InWorld will be marketing packs of sound clips and effects, with the first due for delivery next week.