If you are looking for a free Microsoft Excel® templates, below you will find a comprehensive list of excel spreadsheet templates and calculators created by Spreadsheet123.com. Vast majority of spreadsheet templates on this page are created with purpose to become a solution for practically any occasion in your life, whether your are moving home or placing kids to college, getting ready for.
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Download Free Schedule Templates and Daily Planners.
We have a number of schedule templates and calendars that you can download and edit using Microsoft Excel or OpenOffice. A spreadsheet is a great tool for creating a daily schedule or weekly schedule. It's not too difficult to create your own schedule from scratch, but like most people, you probably value your time and money, so hopefully our free schedule templates will be just what you need.
Schedule TemplatesGantt Chart Project Schedule
This Gantt Chart template is perfect for project scheduling and detailed task scheduling.
House Cleaning Schedule
Create a 4-week cleaning schedule to print a hange on your fridge.
Travel Itinerary Template
Create a concise and printable summary of your travel plans using this itinerary template.
Class Schedule
This class schedule is essential for any college student. Use it to help you plan your weekly class schedule for a new semester to ensure that you don't accidentally overlap your work, classes, training times, etc.
Work Schedule
This work schedule template is designed to let you print two weeks at a time. Easily modify the template for night shifts or other shifts. Includes mini monthly calendars for convenience in planning.
Simple Weekly Schedule
Use this template to create and print an easy-to-use weekly schedule.
Lesson Schedule
Create a yearly lesson schedule for a class with multiple teachers.
Construction Schedule Template
Easily create a construction schedule for multi-year projects. A simple way to create an overview for a project plan.
Appointment Sign Up Template
Print an appointment schedule sign up sheet to put on your office door.
Baby Feeding Schedule
Track your baby's health by recording feeding times, sleeping times, etc.
Weekly Reward Chart
Download a weekly reward chart for tracking progress on chores, practice, or other tasks.
Kids Chore Schedule
Print a weekly kids chore schedule to help you keep your house in order
Project Schedule Template
Create a simple project schedule in Excel with just some basic cell formatting.
Weekly Schedule
This weekly schedule is a generic version of the class schedule template listed above, but not as complicated as the weekly calendar.
Immunization Schedule
Keep an electronic record of vaccinations for you and your children.
Appointment Schedule Template
Use this template to schedule and track appointments on a daily/weekly basis.
Content Calendar Template
Plan your posts in advance using this social media content calendar template.
Shift SchedulesShift Schedule
This shift schedule template is great for job scheduling, shift scheduling, etc.
Work Rotation Schedule
Create a work rotation schedule automatically based on an on/off shift pattern.
Shift Calendar
Create a yearly shift calendar for rotating 24-hour shifts. Designed specifically for firefighters.
Shift Work Calendar
Create a yearly work calendar for showing a rotating shift pattern.
Employee Schedule
Create a shift schedule for any number of employees. Simple design for easy customization. Set up for a day and night shift.
PlannersPersonal Planner Template
The ultimate personal weekly planner with everything you need on a single page.
Meal Planner
These meal planners are great for creating and printing weekly or monthly meal plans. Customize your own list of meals to populate the drop down lists in the planners.
Daily Planner
A printable daily schedule template that lets you create your own daily planner using standard letter-size paper that can be included in your 3-ring binder.
Weekly Planner
A printable weekly planner page for people who don't need the detail of the daily planner.
Monthly Planner
A printable monthly planner page with notes, to-do list, and goals section (not just a calendar).
Yearly Planner Calendar
This planning calendar can be used to print a 2-page, 12-month calendar with space below each day to write brief notes.
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A printable weekly family planner template for appointments and meals with lists for to dos, chores, and shopping.
Homework Planner
Get organized. List your assignments and plan your week to get your homework done.
World Meeting Planner
Use this spreadsheet to help plan meetings for attendees in multiple time zones.
Weekly Student Planner
Keep up with your assignments and other activities using this 2-page student planner with columns for each subject and rows for each week day.
Appointment Book
Print a full year of weekly appointment calendar pages (double-sided) that you can assemble into a book or 3-ring binder.
Related Content
While I'm still working on my own project(s), I thought I'd share this announcement about an app Mike has been working on for quite a while. For those who don't know, Mike is a friend of mine who made this website and curates it. He's also big into music apps and has always wanted to create his own. This is his biggest and most ambitious project to date. It uses Caustic's audio engine at its core, but everything else, from the streamlined workflow to the smooth snappy graphics is his own creation.I encourage you to check it out on the Play Store. Here's a rundown of what it is:Drum Pad Beats is a fun beat/composer - scene/remixer to capture those ideas when that flash of inspiration hits while away from the studio.Drum Pad Beats is aimed at users that want to create rhythms and melodies using pads and step sequencers.
With the added ability to export their creations to wav, ogg or midi loops (zip, pcmsynth for Caustic), user ideas can be taken farther in mobile or desktop Digital Audio Workstations.Great for sharing beats/tracks as dpb files and remixing another artist's track, the track could then be remixed again adding even more flavor. I was looking into adding sync signal capabilities to my to mimic what KORG have in their SyncKontrol app for iOS.
Their app generates an audio pulse which can be used to control tempo on Monotribe and Volca machines. Adding it to CEVS would mean people on all platforms could benefit from the extra control as well as adding swing capabilities to machines without a swing knob such as the Volca Keys, Bass, etc.The Volca Sample does have a swing knob but many have noticed that it doesn't seem to send its swing signal via the 'sync out' jack unfortunately. The following post is the result of my research into KORG' s sync signal and explains why other Volcas just can't swing like the Sample. If someone from KORG wants to chime in and correct or confirm my findings (paging ), that would be awesome.Open the following image to follow along. It might look a bit technical but I'll do my best to keep to simple terms.Figure 1 shows KORG's basic sync clock in pink.
A clock signal is just that, a reliable voltage pulse either from the machine itself or from another source that comes around on time, regularly, like seconds on a clock. Synths 'listen in' on this signal to sync up their sequencers, LFOs, etc. Below that are 16 step boxes which represent the steps on a Volca machine.
Notice how they appear at regular intervals. This is because their timing relies on the sync clock.The first thing to notice is that the clock skips a 16th note step, it actually lines up with 8th note timing instead. This is very important and the main reason why we're seeing some strange things between machines. Having a clock that runs slower than your smallest step isn't a big deal, electronics can easily work out sub-step timing as soon as they receive 2 pulses. The problem comes when you want to create effects like swing.Swing (sometimes called shuffle) is the change in timing from a straight, evenly-spaced sequence. It's often used to create more human, less-mechanical rhythms. An example in nature would be the human heart. It doesn't go BOOM-BOOM-BOOM, it goes, BOOOM-baBOOOM-baBOOOM due to the timing of the various squishy valves in there.
In musical notation, this is often represented by dotted notes. One note is held a bit longer, at the expense of the next note which comes in a bit later and gets shortened by an equivalent amount.The size of the note we chose to stretch is what defines the type of swing. If we use 8th notes as our measure of the 'note', and then play fast (16ths) notes we get a swinging effect that sounds more rigid, like a military snare march. If we use 16th notes as the swing unit of measure, we get a more groovy 'house / hiphop' sound. (see audio examples at the bottom of this post)Looking at Figure 2, you'll see how the SyncKontrol app creates swing by delaying every other 8th note pulse.
The timing delay is defined by the swing amount in the app and goes from barely noticeable to extreme where the second note has barely started before the next comes in again. When we apply this to a machine with a 16-step sequencer, we see that the two first steps are longer and the second two are shorter and delayed. This is because we're essentially splitting our swung 8th notes into halves to get our 16ths note steps.Now in Figure 3, we see how the Volca Sample does its own thing and (I presume) modifies the sub-divided internal clock of higher precision to control swing when you turn the physical knob on the unit. The swing modifies every second 16th note this time (dark red clock), giving us the nicer swing effect. When it comes time to generate a sync signal for the Sync Out jack, it uses every other clock pulse in order to create a compatible signal to the standard already established. (pink clock). You'll notice how those pulses aren't affected by the Sample's swing, which is why we perceive the Sample to not send its swing across to others.Conclusion: Apart from working with hacks like working in double-time (and spreading out your beats over 2 parts), the other machines simple will never be able to swing like the Volca Sample.
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The timing protocol is established to 8ths notes and changing that in the future would mean old machines would play twice as fast. Why KORG chose this is a mystery, seems odd given that most synths since forever have relied on 16-step sequencers. Maybe a decision was made in the name of simplifying things for low-cost machines, maybe it was historical reasons to be compatible with even older machines (I'll admit I'm pretty new to hardware synths). Maybe an oversight with regards to ever offering swing in the first place.
But hey, at least knowing why helps quell the frustration, right?And to answer a question which I'm sure will come up: Yes, I'll be adding my 'SyncKontrol' module to CEVS anyway. Just don't expect miracles from it.Here are some audio examples to help explain the difference between no swing, 8th note swing and 16th note swing (same beat used, created in Caustic, shuffle set to 50%)As an interesting side-note: What happens if you send a swung synckontrol signal to a Volca Sample that's got its swing knob turned up? A multiplied result which sounds really weird. Every step in a 4-step sequence starts long and gets shorter and shorter. I'll save you the graph this time but you can try for yourself. or to post comments.
In this tutorial, I show how to record and loop simple acoustic guitar parts with Caustic's PCM Synth. The process works for any type of instrument/vocals/whatever that you want to include alongside your Caustic synth and drum tracks.It's not like recording audio in a multi-track DAW. Your don't record into a timeline, you simply record parts 'live' as you play along to your Caustic project. You then edit the audio - and loop it if you want to - with PCM Synth and assign each recording to it's own key on the keyboard.
or to post comments. Christmas comes early for Volca Sample owners.KORG were nice enough to open up their volca sample SDK to 3rd parties so I took a few days to rip out Caustic's WAV editor and turn it into a stand-alone, multi-platform tool that lets you import, load, record, edit and upload samples for use with your. Although it didn't happen as fast as I would have hoped, the Caustic 3.1 update is live.
This update brings the much requested AudioBus and virtual MIDI support for iOS as well as a brand new synth, machine routing, velocity drum pads, undo/redo, UI skins, stability improvements and much more.Check out the 'what's new video' for a quick look at the new stuff. And be sure to watch all the other new videos too.Desktop versions. Free, full version, but no support.
New is a MacOS version and a standalone (no registry access required) Windows application.26 Mb​27 Mb (for use on public computers or when you can't install programs, can be run directly from a USB drive once unzipped)(OS/X 10.6 Intel required) 28 Mb. or to post comments. Following with the tradition of, I figured I might as well release these.Contrary to Caustic, LoopStack never really worked on Windows because I couldn't be bothered to hook up the microphone code. A couple of people asked for it, so a few months back I hooked it all up and made a release package.Yesterday someone requested Sand! For Windows, and even though there are tons of better alternatives for Windows, I'm happy to release that too.Same as Caustic, the Windows versions are not officially supported so use them if they work for you, but please don't request support for them.
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March 2023
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