Thanks so very much! This will be helpful information. I am interested in knowing if there is still the option to "Disable Driver Signature Enforcement". I know that we may have to edit the driver's "inf" file to change the windows 10 references to 11, but that this would not work if Windows 11 does not allow us to "Disable Driver Signature Enforcement".
Roland midi driver windows 10
Download Zip: https://bliztorgoldbo.blogspot.com/?file=2vF6ji
Third, I plan to wait until Roland releases updated midi controller drivers for their current products. Then I will download one of those drivers and take a look at that working win11 Roland driver's "inf" file. Perhaps seeing a working Roland Win 11 driver will help to see if there is something that can be edited on the PCR drivers. I know this is a long shot, but it is my plan now.
Anyway, in my limited understanding the problem is that all the recent 64-bit editions of Windows (starting with 7 (or even Vista?)) require hardware driver signing: -us/windows-hardware/drivers/develop/signing-a-driverWhat's more, Microsoft's rules for driver signing have become more and more strict: _hardware_certification/2015/04/01/driver-signing-changes-in-windows-10/
However, this article suggests that driver signing can still be circumvented in Windows 10 64-bit: -to-disable-driver-signature-verification-on-64-bit-windows-8.1-so-that-you-can-install-unsigned-drivers/But I have no idea whether this will work for the "old" GS-10 driver.
thanks for getting back to me, with your help and a bit of further searching, I found a way to get it to work. Like you said, you have to disable the driver signing thingee. However, then Windows comes back saying the driver is no good anyway. With a bit of further searching, I found a way to get a GT-10 to work( -us/windows/forum/windows_10-hardware/wi...). However, I don't have a GT10, but a GS10... but with a bit of trial and error, I got the thing to work! For those interested, here's how:
OK - it looks like I misled you (and myself). The driver for the Motif is Yamahas own and obviously handles multiple access (the midi interface is a Focusrite Scarlett 6I6). The dual use works with the Motif->Chordie,GP combination. If I try the same experiment using a Roland Arranger in place of the Motif keyboard then Chordie is unable to see/open the Roland arranger midi input (the Roland using Windows drivers).
I have a Roland Td-11k virtual drum set and I'm running the current driver for it (1.0.3) on my 2015 MacBook Pro and it will not recognize the set at all. I run the driver in system preferences and It displays the warning "The device could not be found. This settings will automatically become effective when the device is connected the next time." Ive tried numerous usb cables and ports and still no luck. Also have tried finding the device in Audio Midi Setup with no luck. All I want to do is have the drum set send a midi signal to Ableton 10 through Usb a to b to trigger software instruments. Ive ran this setup prior on on my Pc running Windows 10 and it worked like a charm. I don't know if this a problem on High Sierra or just Macs in general but any input would be appreciated.
Do you get similar issues with other midi controllers or is it just related to the ddrum device here?Could it be a computer performance issue for your PC, are you using the correct drivers, etc? (if so, check out my response to Roman above on optimizations suggestions).
Hooked my Alesis Command to my PC laptop using Studio One Pro 5, windows recognizes the AC and Studio 5 recognizes the v-drums both show as Alesis Command but I am not getting signal response in Studio 5. Watched several vids on setting it up but still no go. Per Alesis web I should be able to go straight from the usb/midi port to usb on my pc. I do not see where there are any drivers involved but I am using asio drivers for my midi keyboard through audiobox 96. Any thoughts of guidance would be much appreciated! 2ff7e9595c
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