beautypg.com

Usb flash drive, Getting acquainted with the jupiter-80, Jupiter-80 – Roland Jupiter 80 User Manual

Page 16

background image

Getting Acquainted with the JUPITER-80

16

About Memory

The area in which sounds and other settings are stored is called “memory.”
Memory is divided into three areas: temporary memory (the temporary area), rewritable memory, and non-rewritable memory.

USB Flash Drive

ROLAND Folder

SuperNATURAL

Synth Tones (2,048)

Registrations (256)

Live Sets (2,560)

User Arpeggio Styles (128)

System

Settings

JUPITER-80

Non-rewritable Memory

SuperNATURAL

Acoustic Tones

Manual Percussions

Drums/SFX

Preset Arpeggio Styles

Temporary Area

Rewritable Memory

SuperNATURAL

Synth Tones (2,048)

Registrations (256)

Live Sets (2,560)

User Arpeggio Styles (128)

System

Settings

Select

Select

Write

Restore

Backup

Temporary Memory (the Temporary

Area)

The data for a sound you select is called into this area.
When you play the keyboard, the sounds you hear are produced

according to the settings in the temporary area.
When you edit sounds, you’re editing the data that’s in the

temporary area.
Settings in the temporary area are temporary; they will be lost

when you turn off the power or select other settings.
If you want to keep the settings of the temporary area, you must

save them to rewritable memory.

MEMO

When you import an SMF (Standard MIDI File) as a user arpeggio

style (p. 45), the data is imported directly into rewritable memory;

it does not pass through the temporary area.

Rewritable Memory

This is where you can save Registrations, Live Sets, SuperNATURAL

Synth Tones, user arpeggio styles, and system settings (system

parameters).

Non-rewritable Memory

This contains SuperNATURAL Acoustic Tones, Manual Percussion,

Drums/SFX, and preset arpeggio style data.
This data cannot be directly rewritten; however, you are free to save

the edited results in a Registration or Live Set.

USB Flash Drive

The data saved in rewritable memory can be backed up to a USB

flash drive (p. 79).
A USB flash drive can contain one set of backup data.