MidiArtnet

Turn any MIDI console into a light console with MidiArtnet!

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With MidiArtnet you can easily create and control art-net and dmx simply by mapping midi signals.

The app is designed to quickly get you going without having to learn any difficult concepts. Simply create a new item, touch the button or move the fader on the midi device, enter your desired universe and address and you are done.

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Features

  • Control an unlimited amount of universes and addresses
  • Animate Midi notes with 30+ transitions
  • Change fader behavior by setting a fader curve
  • Attach multiple actions to a single fader or knob
  • Choose between fixed, fader or note elements
  • Built in ArtNet viewer to monitor your output
  • Send midi data back to your device to color your controller
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    Features

  • Save and load mappings including the current state
  • Blackout and ArtNet/Midi disable
  • Copy, paste and duplicate items, also with keyboard shortcuts
  • Super simple to setup
  • 20/30/40/60 fps operation modes
  • Midi learn button
  • Live Midi input viewing and monitoring
  • Available for Windows and MacOS
  • Statefull data

    Since the design of the data flow is procedural, multiple buttons can map to the same address, where the last activated state will remain. This allows you to for instance have multiple buttons to control the same led strip, but trigger different RGB colors or intensities.

    Animations

    Midi Note items can have an in, out and in & out animation. Animations can be controlled by setting their duration and transition to make sure that every action is smooth and fluid.

  • Fader Curves

    Faders can be mapped with a low and high value and a fader curve. This curve allows you to for example give you some headroom on your controller, or make your fader move in steps, as low as 2. By flipping the low and high value, you can create an inverse behaviour.

    Great tool

    We think that having this tool in your toolbox allows you to quickly and easily setup and test any art-net installation. It’s also great for controlling other software with art-net capabilities over te network, simply with a midi device.

  • Try for free

    Feel free to download and try our software to see if it fits your needs. The demo is fully functional with a limited usage time of 10 minutes.

    Smart tools

    With smart tools that will hold you back from repetitive work, like duplicating items, repeatable addresses or cloning items with an address offsets, setting up large led walls or strips is done in a matter of seconds.

Watch the tutorial

Download MidiArtNet

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Please select your operating system:


BUY for MacOS BUY for Windows


We offer a fully functional trial version that allows
you to test the apps full features with a 10 minutes time limit.


TRY for MacOS      TRY for Windows



MidiArtnet on Mac App Store
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Eveything you need to get the most out of your MIDI devices.

Other ArtNet Tools



Eveything you need to get the most out of your DMX devices.

We also make:

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ArtNetView

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timecode
Generator

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timecode

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Juicebar

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About Haute Technique

As creators of the world leading TimeCode Sync and as the founders of Juicebar for Resolume, Haute Technique has years of experience in creating new innovating experiences for the dance and entertainment industry.

Feel free to contact us at info@hautetechnique.com

About MIDI

MIDI (an acronym for Musical Instrument Digital Interface) is a technical standard that describes a communications protocol, digital interface, and electrical connectors that connect a wide variety of electronic musical instruments, computers, and related audio devices for playing, editing and recording music. The specification originates in a paper published by Dave Smith and Chet Wood then of Sequential Circuits at the October 1981 Audio Engineering Society conference in New York City then titled Universal Synthesizer Interface.

A single MIDI link through a MIDI cable can carry up to sixteen channels of information, each of which can be routed to a separate device or instrument. This could be sixteen different digital instruments, for example. MIDI carries event messages; data that specify the instructions for music, including a note's notation, pitch, velocity (which is heard typically as loudness or softness of volume); vibrato; panning to the right or left of stereo; and clock signals (which set tempo). When a musician plays a MIDI instrument, all of the key presses, button presses, knob turns and slider changes are converted into MIDI data. One common MIDI application is to play a MIDI keyboard or other controller and use it to trigger a digital sound module (which contains synthesized musical sounds) to generate sounds, which the audience hears produced by a keyboard amplifier. MIDI data can be transferred via MIDI or USB cable, or recorded to a sequencer or digital audio workstation to be edited or played back..

More info on MIDI can be found on Wikipedia - MIDI

About art-net

Art-Net is a royalty-free communications protocol for transmitting the DMX512-A lighting control protocol and Remote Device management (RDM) protocol over the User Datagram Protocol (UDP) of the Internet protocol suite. It is used to communicate between "nodes" (e.g., intelligent lighting instruments) and a "server" (a lighting desk or general purpose computer running lighting control software).

Art-Net is a simple implementation of DMX512-A protocol over UDP in which lighting control information is conveyed in IP packets, typically on a private local area network such as Ethernet. Supported functions include transmitting and receiving lighting data (e.g., fader levels for individual lights, positions of movable lights); management functions such as detecting nodes, updating node control parameters, and transmitting timecodes; and functions that allow nodes to "subscribe" to "publisher" nodes so that, for example, nodes A and B can subscribe to node C (C will unicast information to A and B).

More info about Art-Net can be found on Wikipedia - Art-net