The obvious solution for working with Audiality 2 in a musical context is of course running it as a virtual instrument plugin!
As a Cubase/Nuendo user, I'd obviously go with VST first, but I'm leaning towards JUCE, which seems to make it a lot easier to support both VST and other plugin APIs, and also comes with a nice GUI toolkit and various other stuff.
(I thought I created issues for this ages ago, but I guess not...)
The obvious solution for working with Audiality 2 in a musical context is of course running it as a virtual instrument plugin!
As a Cubase/Nuendo user, I'd obviously go with VST first, but I'm leaning towards JUCE, which seems to make it a lot easier to support both VST and other plugin APIs, and also comes with a nice GUI toolkit and various other stuff.
(I thought I created issues for this ages ago, but I guess not...)