on black + white compact mac (macintosh plus, mac SE, mac SE/30)
i read that its related directly to Dr T's X-OR application
http://www.oldschooldaw.com/forums/index.php?topic=3222http://web.archive.org/web/19961018010604/http://motu.com/pages/Unisyn.htmlUnisyn 1.1-Macintosh and Windows Universal MIDI device editor/librarian software ($395 list)
Unisyn gives you the most comprehensive sound management features available on the Macintosh and Windows, including seamless integration with Performer. Unisyn supports 217 MIDI devices-more than twice as many as Galaxy.
New synths supported include: Alesis Quadrasynth, Roland JV1080 and SC-88, the entire KORG X & i series, Yamaha Pro Mix 01, E-mu Morpheus and Ultra Proteus, Ensoniq DP/4+, KAT DrumKat 3.5, and the Tech 21 Sans Amp PSA 1.
If you want a complete editor/librarian NOW for these devices, there's only one choice: Unisyn! And Unisyn gives you all the features you'd expect in a leading editor/librarian. Modify a sound in Unisyn using graphic envelope controls and faders, while getting instant feedback within the context of your music as Performer plays the sequence. Generate entire banks of new sounds with a click of the mouse using Blend&Mingle, Randomize, and Copy/Paste Parameter features. Unisyn can even share bank names with Performer and other FreeMIDI-compatible software for accurate pop-up sound lists.
Unisyn can store thousands of sounds at your fingertips and recall them instantly using database-style search criteria, such as "plucked electric bass" with "bright stereo flange". Frustrated because you can't recreate the settings in your gear for last month's project? Unisyn can do it with a few clicks of the mouse.
Another unique Unisyn advantage: include only the banks and patches you need in your studio "snapshots" to load them faster than any other librarian.