Interesting observations going on - maybe Layering has some optimizations under the hood.. abs. not sure.
If it gives some performance benefit to an i3 - indeed go for it
I'd like to ask you Antonio, (for someone who might want to do this with their i3, but whom may dislike editing layers and worry it will sound wrong)...
Do you still gain this performance boost, IF you mute one of the layers? -
that would be such a cool simple way for i3 owners to get a little bump, just by clicking "layers", adding an instrument, then clicking 'mute' on it.. done. Same sounds, better perf. ??
Maybe multi-core operations are uniquely more economical when 2 different layers are.. IDK, working on different cores.. slitting/sharing load-bearing computations?
Or threads might just fly well on i3 when using layers in some way specific to that CPU type.. (Not sure if any of that is the case tho).
Benefits of shared processes with some thread-hopping lowering intensity of required CPU overhead?
In my cases, I can't say I see a similar thing though on a high spec CPU. So maybe.. on i3 some optimizations come from something not to do with Pianoteq?
Pianoteq Studio Bundle (Pro plus all instruments) - Kawai MP11 digital piano - Yamaha HS8 monitors