The effects were available in the WOW2 and WOW3 versions. WOW2 added several effects such as chorus, echo and flanger, plus a modulation routable filter with 5 sliders for cross-modulation. The WOW3 version added the option to create and edit new waveforms as well as a built-in user-friendly effects loop to turn distortion into subtractive chorus or delay.
In 1997 Sugar Bytes WOW2 became a standalone program with an all-new and more feature-rich engine. Other new features include samples and midi input/output. WOW2 was more expensive than previous versions of WOW but was faster to work with.
WOW2x
WOW2x is a powerful version of WOW which includes every feature WOW2 has and more. It is fully featured with more effects than WOW2, along with many new features including audio effects, LPF effects, buildable synth sound engines, two user-defined noise waves, 48 audio effects, one-click effects, a versatile effects loop, a stereo effects loop, adjustable send and return feedback levels, FX chains, user-defined presets, bank switching, sample and midi input/output, sampling rates of 16, 24, 48, 96, and 192 kHz, recording with 24-bit and 96-bit resolution, and a complete audio metering system. Some of the built-in effects are still available in WOW2x but many new effects are also available.
See also
WOW2x
References
External links
Sugar Bytes
WOW Software Foundation
Sugar Bytes Homepage
Category:Software synthesizers
Category:Electronic musical instruments
Category:Effects unitsFlorence Little
Florence Little, née Scullard (17 October 1911, in Birkenhead, Merseyside – 18 August 2001, in Long Melford, Suffolk), was a British journalist, playwright, and anti-fascism activist.
Little was born in Birkenhead to the actor and later conductor Sir John Little (1868–1939) and the actress Hilda Scullard (née Harold). Little's paternal grandfather was the German-born mathematician and economist Arthur Scullard, and her mother's family was of English and German descent. Little attended Grove House School, St Leonards, and the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, graduating in 1932.
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