Wholehog 3 doesn´t respond to MSC

Hi,
I am having trouble when I send MSC to the Wholehog 3 console. I did every setup steps as recalled from the manual to enable the console to receive MSC, but while I send the MSC data it simply does nothing.
I am confident that my MSC device transmitter is working ok, and that the MSC data is the correct for the console. I also downloaded the Status Cue software ( I do not know of any other software simpler than this to view MSC in the PC via the MIDI In port), and it seems to receive every MSC command properly.
Are any MIDI event monitor in the Wholehog 3 console?
I suspect that I am only bypassing a simple configuration step to work properly with MSC in the console, but other that the Network panel settings I do not what could be.
Thank you very much for any help.
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  • Todd,

    It seems that you've found a set of tools that works for you.

    For most of us, the easiest way to get the best feature set within an application for viewing and testing MIDI, MSC, and MTC, is going to be downloading and installing MIDIOx.

    If a typical Wholehog user asks the question "How can I look at MIDI data?", which do you think is a more reasonable answer?

    1) Download and install MIDIOx. It's free for personal use and has more than enough features to show you everything you need. It has powerful filtering when viewing and can even send custom MIDI strings and MTC.

    2) Sit down with gcc and write your own MIDI viewing application.

    I'd argue that in almost every single case, the KISS rule will win and answer #1 will be your best option.

    Feel free to disagree.
Reply
  • Todd,

    It seems that you've found a set of tools that works for you.

    For most of us, the easiest way to get the best feature set within an application for viewing and testing MIDI, MSC, and MTC, is going to be downloading and installing MIDIOx.

    If a typical Wholehog user asks the question "How can I look at MIDI data?", which do you think is a more reasonable answer?

    1) Download and install MIDIOx. It's free for personal use and has more than enough features to show you everything you need. It has powerful filtering when viewing and can even send custom MIDI strings and MTC.

    2) Sit down with gcc and write your own MIDI viewing application.

    I'd argue that in almost every single case, the KISS rule will win and answer #1 will be your best option.

    Feel free to disagree.
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