You were not the only one And before that, in 1968, when I was teaching myslef FORTRAN IV from a probrammed learning guide, back in the days of the Hollerith card, I realized a number of things 1 many cards were spoiled by mis-types. 2 we had closed-circuit TV, we had the teletype which could turn pulses into letters that could be read and we had electronic memory Why not outit keypunch machines with these, then let the operator see what was being input and edit that before it went to the keypunch mechanism? I was considered a mad visionary. A year later, DARPA would build the internet, 10 years later someone would strap a TV to a computer and throw memory chips in the thing Now, I am no ohger avisioary And I was only looking to visualize one function
I don't think we had things miniatureized to the point where we could put them all in one keyboard In what looks like the mid-noughts, Generalmusic put out the Ensamble which had a hard drive and some RAM but even that one has its limitation, and the small one, 61 keys, sold for over 3,000. The arranger Keyboard aslo has "styles", Personally, I would find 61 keybs, with one octive for playing chords fort auto accompaniment a bit cramped I would probably want to use a 61 not KB for play and a 25 not KB for comping or bass. The idea with the arranger KB is to make a computerized instrument I want to start with a computer, then put the rest in. Also, I don't know if the laptops didn't have the oomf until the teens. Could a 2009 laptop accommodate V Collection 8, IK Syntronik, Sforzando SFZ/SF2 player and all I can cram into it, or the like, and 200 VSTi and about 125 VST effects? and iven the mid-teen laptops didn't have the SSD's or SD cards we have now. I would not start with anything less than a 512 SS and a tenth gen core i7 for that kind of thing, Don't forget, I'm talking about playing live as well as recording