Midi View

MidiView is a simple MIDI Monitor app to that shows bi-directional MIDI packages that flows through your machine.

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Setting up the app is easy. Just plug in your MIDI device and see what is going on between your software and device

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Features

  • Easy and clear interface
  • Windows & macOS
  • View bi-direction history
  • Shows the package direction
  • Export to CSV
  • Custom driver technology for Windows
  • Perfect tool for debugging problems or investigating flows in MIDI.
  • View in both Note name, hex and int

Watch the tutorial

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

Download

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Please select your operating system:


Download for macOS Download for Windows




Cyberduck on Mac App Store

Other View and Monitor Tools



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

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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