Roland followed up the Juno-60 with the Roland Juno-106 in 1984. The Juno-106 featured MIDI, had patch storage of 128 sounds, replaced the arpeggiator with a portamento effect, and introduced Roland's now-standard left/right/push performance lever for pitch-bend and modulation. The
Alpha Juno 1 and Alpha Juno 2 were released in 1985. These synths offered new programming capabilities, backlit screens and a new interface. The Juno 2 also featured a velocity‑ and aftertouch‑sensitive keyboard as well as a cartridge slot for storing patches. They were seen as too expensive and difficult to program, so were a commercial failure, ceasing production in 1986. Roland revived the Juno name in the 00s, releasing the
Juno-D in 2004, the
Juno-G in 2006, the Juno-Stage in 2008, the Juno-Di in 2009 and the
Juno-Gi 2010. Despite the name, these synths had nothing in common with the Juno or Alpha Juno synths, with Roland instead using the name Juno to denote 'affordable' synthesizers. In 2015, Roland released the JU-06 as part of their Boutique range. The JU-06 is a 4-voice version of the Juno-106, using Roland's digital Analog Circuit Behaviour (ACB) technology. An updated version, the JU-06A, was released in 2019, which is a Juno-60 switchable to Juno-106. It features the continuous high-pass filter of the 106, the envelope-controllable pulse-width-modulation of the 60, and the filter of both switchable from the front panel. Roland released the Juno-X in 2022, a modern synth featuring digital emulations of the Juno-60 and Juno-106 as well as an additional Juno-X model that features a supersaw waveform, velocity sensitivity and an Alpha-Juno style pitch envelope control. == Software emulations ==