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You can at any time download Obsidian's Onyx, Chamsys Magic Q or any of the other free software people have mentionned. Chamsys Magic Q has a built-in visualizer, which is a very nice feature. The Onyx software is imo the easiest to learn ... but I'm biased, since it was the first software I tried out.
It seems to be rather hard to find a freeware (or cheap) software that supports either SMPTE or MIDI Timecode (this would make it easy to sync to the playback software), lets me design my Lightshow virtually and then output the DMX data in sync.
It's amazing that you need such bloated software to control the colour of a light, when clearly the default patterns have no performance overhead compared to the atrocious software required to change them.
the free and open-source light show software that lets you turn any party into a visually stunning experience. With MusicBeam, you can create dynamic and interactive light displays that are synced to your favorite music tracks, adding an extra level of excitement to your performances.
OpenRGB aims to replace every single piece of proprietary RGB software with one lightweight app. Synchronize lighting across multiple brands of devices. Contribute your RGB devices. Open Source. OpenRGB is free and open source software under the GNU General static License version 2. This means anyone is free to view and modify the code.
Control and sync your RGB devices from one free application. SignalRGB is the only RGB software you'll ever need.
The Q Light Controller+ (QLC+) software is a free and open-source DMX software with quite a ton of handy features. It is available across platforms: Windows OS, macOS, Linux, and Raspberry Pi. QLC+ can control DMX or analog lighting systems (moving heads, scanners, dimmers, and many others).