Roland – Cloud Bundle 1.0.1.0 (VSTi3) [WiN x64]

By | October 10, 2023

 

Year/Date of Issue: 08.2023
Version: 1.0.1.0
Developer: Roland
Developer website: Roland Cloud
Format: VSTi3
Bit depth: 64bit
Tablet: cured R2R
System requirements: Windows 10 (1903)


Description: A set of synthesizers and drum machines from Roland:

Roland D50 v1.12
Roland JD-800 v1.0.2
Roland JUNO-60 v1.0.4
Roland JUNO-60 CHORUS v1.0.2.2
Roland JUNO-106 v2.01
Roland JUPITER-4 v2.01
Roland JUPITER-8 v2.01
Roland JV-1080 v1.10
Roland JX-3P v1.07
Roland PROMARS v1.14
Roland SH-2 v1.16
Roland SH-101 v1.17
Roland SRX BRASS v1.04
Roland SRX DANCE TRAX v1.06
Roland SRX ELECTRIC PIANO v1.04
Roland SRX KEYBOARDS v1.06
Roland SRX ORCHESTRA v1.10
Roland SRX PIANO I. v1.02
Roland SRX PIANO II. v1.02
Roland SRX STRINGS v1.03
Roland SRX STUDIO v1.04
Roland SRX WORLD v1.05
Roland SYSTEM-1 v1.15
Roland SYSTEM-8 v1.38
Roland SYSTEM-100 v1.13
Roland TB-303 v1.06
Roland TR-606 v1.03
Roland TR-707 v1.01
Roland TR-727 v1.01
Roland TR-808 v1.10
Roland TR-909 v1.12
Roland XV-5080 v1.04
Roland ZENOLOGY v2.0.1
Roland ZENOLOGY FX v1.5.2


Add. Information: Contains only VST3 format
Tested on:
Windows 10 Professional 64 bit, 22H2
Cubase AI 12.0.70


Installation :
1. Double-click Setup.Roland.Cloud.Bundle.v1.0.1.0.x64.EN.exe and follow the installation instructions.
2. Select the tools you want to install and click the Install button.
3. Wait for the installation to complete.
4. Done.

NOTE
After running the installer, wait about 10-20 seconds while the files are unpacked in the background.
The installer always installs the tools on the system drive. For example, if the system is located on the G drive, then the package will be installed on this drive, and the registry entries will be located in this path.
Once the installation is complete, the temporarily unpacked files will be deleted.


2 thoughts on “Roland – Cloud Bundle 1.0.1.0 (VSTi3) [WiN x64]

  1. rey

    I probably missed whatever humor or sarcasm there is above, if any, but if none, you might check for .log files by date & time to see where installs actually are?
    Other thing is the sysop of this site probably steers far around potential malware. If you’re on Windows 10, do you disable “real-time protection” in Windows security settings? That is too good at detecting and grabbing what it perceives as threats that aren’t.

    Reply

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