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Korg OASYS

OASYS
KORG OASYS (1).jpg
Korg OASYS
Manufacturer Korg
Dates 2005–2009
Price $8,000–$8,500
Technical specifications
Polyphony 172 for HD-1, CX-3, & PolysixEX; 96 for AL-1;
52 for MOD-7; 48 for STR-1 & MS-20EX
(all maximum; may vary depending on other
sounding voices and effects)
Timbrality 16
Oscillator depends on synthesis engine
Synthesis type PCM, Wave Sequencing, Vector, Physical Modelling,
Sampler, Analog Modelling
Filter depends on synthesis engine
Aftertouch expression yes
Velocity expression yes
Storage memory 1GB RAM, upgradable to 2GB. No physical ROM.
Preloaded samples include 314MB "ROM"
(loaded into RAM automatically at startup),
and optionally-loaded 313MB EXs1 "ROM Expansion"
& 503MB EXs2 "Concert Grand Piano."
0MB to 1.5GB available for user samples,
depending on memory configuration and loaded EXs.
Internal 40GB HDD.
Effects 12 insert, 2 master, 2 total
Hardware 2.8 GHz Intel Pentium 4 processor
Input/output
Keyboard 76 or 88-key
Left-hand control 2x Joystick, 2x Switch, Ribbon, KARMA
External control MIDI

The Korg OASYS is a workstation synthesizer released in early 2005, 1 year after the successful Korg Triton Extreme. Unlike the Triton series, the OASYS uses a custom Linux operating system that was designed to be arbitrarily expandable via software updates, with its functionality limited only by the PC-like hardware.

OASYS was a software implementation of the research project that ultimately resulted in the OASYS PCI, a DSP card which offered multiple synthesis engines. The original OASYS keyboard concept had to be scrapped because of excessive production costs and limitations of then-current technology.

Production of the OASYS was officially discontinued in April 2009. Korg sold just over 3000 units worldwide. The final software update was released on November 24, 2009.

In 2011, Korg Kronos, a successor of Korg OASYS, was introduced on Winter NAMM Show.

The standard Oasys comes with hardware similar to many personal computers:

It features Korg's OASYS (acronym for Open Architecture SYnthesis Studio) technology, which allows multiple synthesis engines to be used simultaneously. The OASYS also includes second-generation KARMA technology (with the first generation having first appeared in the Korg KARMA). It has either a 76 key synth-action, or 88 key hammer-action keyboard.

EXB-DI (Digital interface board)

The optional EXB-DI adds 8 channels of ADAT Optical format 24-bit 48 kHz digital output, as well as a word clock input. The EXB-DI was first made available for the Korg Triton Studio keyboard and Triton Rack module - on these units only 6 outputs are available via ADAT. Bar a few early models of the Oasys, the EXB-DI is user installable.

As of November 24, 2009 the latest version of the OASYS OS is 1.3.3a, featuring the following synthesis engines:


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