It's intriguing. It could be a description of the Kronos without changing a word. The picture could be a matte plastic Kronos. It doesn't look or sound like an upgrade, but could be an up-to-date yet lite version, and the problem is that the last thing we need is a lite version, what with this market segment being fringe and whatnot.
It looks just like something that could have been put out 2 years after the original Kronos if the Kronos had been commercially struggling.
KORG KRONOS or Waiting???
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I understand with mini keys or small keybeds may be trying to hit a price point and keep the cost down not having aftertouch of velocity or release velocity but why do that to something that may replace a Kornos. I couldn't put a finger on what the problem was when I connected my rp301 Roland to my X61 Kronos to play the piano. I thought the nice piano-style keybed on the RP would translate to a nice play on the Kronos for piano but it didn't. Something was missing. I wasn't sure what the only real difference I found was the RP lacks release velocity. I will wait for a Kronos replacement that has all the keybed capabilities of the Kronos or buy a Kronos 88 in the end. Nautilus doesn't cut it in this regard. FWIW this was my first successful attempt at using midi. And the last since it was a few years ago. I am stepping back into that world now because adding one of the two newest and my existing little synths will only add to the Kronos' capabilities.
Did you try and match key curves for velocity?Bertotti wrote:I thought the nice piano-style keybed on the RP would translate to a nice play on the Kronos for piano but it didn't. Something was missing. I wasn't sure what the only real difference I found was the RP lacks release velocity.
I found many times that midi recorded with one keybed, and does not translate well to all sample libraries.
MIDI gear: Sequential REV2.16, Prologue-8, Hammond XK-3C, Kawai MP7SE piano, Nord Lead 2X, Roland D-05
The lack of those keyboard features is what makes it clear that the Nautilus is not meant to replace the Kronos - it's more complicated for Korg to produce a keyboard without the features than just to include them by using the same design.
This can only mean that the 'crippling' is intentional, and the only possible intent has to be to make way for a different product. I even doubt it will be called Kronos because I think it will be different enough. But it will be a lot more expensive, to compensate for the effort put into it, and so it will only appear when the Kronos 2 is sold out and the used units start going for a premium.
This is speculation. If not speculating, then really nothing can be said.
This can only mean that the 'crippling' is intentional, and the only possible intent has to be to make way for a different product. I even doubt it will be called Kronos because I think it will be different enough. But it will be a lot more expensive, to compensate for the effort put into it, and so it will only appear when the Kronos 2 is sold out and the used units start going for a premium.
This is speculation. If not speculating, then really nothing can be said.