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This is an old revision of ParisIntro made by admin on 2008-04-04 15:42:12.

 

Introduction to PARIS


PARIS stands for Pro Audio Recording Integrated System.

By definition, PARIS is a digital audio workstation, or DAW. It is a hardware/software tracking and mixing environment, normally including a hardware-based DSP "daughterboard" (with the exception of the EDS500 cards; systems based on the EDS500 do not have this "daughterboard").

The "daughterboard" is based around the proprietary ESP2 processor, which is also used by Ensoniq in the DPPro series of effects processors (EDS500-based systems do not include the DSP "daughterboard"), with some rudimentary MIDI capabilities, generally ignored or disabled by users with some exceptions.



PARIS is an unusual platform because it remains one of the only DAWS in its current price range to combine the advantages of hardware with the flexibility of software.

These advantages include:

1) the potential of true zero-latency monitoring under nearly all circumstances
2) particularly well-designed AD/DA conversion, leading to audio quality that still stands up credibly to present-day standards.
3) integrated hardware-DSP-based effects which permit, for example, zero-latency monitoring through compression and reverb without external mixer
4) a high-throughput interleaved file format (.paf) which permitted high track-counts from then-current drives (now largely been nullified by technological advances).
5) an analog-like response to "pushing into the red" or "spanking" PARIS. Some argue this to be due to the ParisPatent covert inclusion of analog-modelling technology.

Limitations include:

1) obsolescence: last official software release was Paris V3.0 in 2000; support discontinued and now solely user-driven; parts in increasingly short supply.
2) a resulting slippage in comparative features with modern DAWs including grid support for multiple tempos,
3) a resulting lack of direct support for current operating systems (third party initiatives have met with both success - Win XP drivers - and failure - Mac OSX drivers)
4) a resulting lack of compatibility with newer filetypes: no support for filetypes beside mono .paf, 'wav and .sd2; minimal support for interleaved stereo files (limited to export and import); rudimentary OMF support; no REX file support.
5) a resulting lack of support for samplerates above 48k (this is argued by devotees to be mitigated or nullified by PARIS' inherent audio quality and today's most common destination formats).
6) a non-standards-compliant GUI - constrained-expansion windows that fit neither Apple or Windows guidelines; hard-coded key bindings



PARIS consists of four discrete components -








ASIO drivers were included as part of the PARIS package to enable other software to access the PARIS hardware. After much experimentation the drivers are considered essentially non-functional by users, due to serious limitations including inability to access MEC modules, a maximum of two channels and a general lack of stability.



Various third-party initiatives specific to PARIS include:







Other initiatives designed to be of use to (but not specifically limited to) the PARIS platform have been:





Finally, the PARIS EQ, generally held to have a desirable sound, have been ported into VST as plug-ins so they can be made available in non-PARIS DAWs.`
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