Check out the competitor's booths (hand bags). Thievery can be the best complement, especially when they want to figure out how you do what you do.

Moderators: Sharp, X-Trade, Pepperpotty, karmathanever
quite so.Hugo wrote:To make it more micro.shabbee wrote:Hugo wrote:I think the MicroStation should be fitted with 49 keys instead of 61.
why?
interesting answer, I still don't see what advantage it would have with less keys.Hugo wrote:To make it more micro.shabbee wrote:Hugo wrote:I think the MicroStation should be fitted with 49 keys instead of 61.
why?
Ah, sorry about the translation then, my girlfriend was certain it was 20 and nothing else!jerrythek wrote:Specs are available for all the products... PS60 and microSTATION are 120-note poly, not 20!
www.korg.com/ps60
www.korg.com/microstation
What a crazy/crowded show, especially today (the consumer day). Sorry but all of our Monotrons were stolen from the booth so anyone looking for it today was out of luck to try it themself. Is that supposed to be the ultimate compliment?!?!?
Jerry
That kind of battery will power a keyboard for 15minutes, maybe. The common 9V battery is made by stacking a bunch of individual cells in series, each of which have little storage capacity. A rechargable NiMH 9V usually has less than 200mAh capacity, while a keyboard like that can draw 600mA, and the battery voltage will drop too low long before it completely is drained. You could construct a battery pack that will run it, however you need to know what you're doing or you could fry your keyboard, because batteries do not produce a single voltage, they have a voltage curve based on charge level, load, temperature, chemistry, and other factors. That's why you don't usually see 9V batteries being used in anything that consumes a lot of power - only low drain devices.iD4rK wrote:And if you want it portable, just build yourself an freaking 9v battery adaptor like this one: