Hi,
I'm looking for a mentor for Google's summer coding project for
students. In a nut-shell, a student pairs with a mentor from an established
open source project in order to complete a modestly sized project. The
benefits to open source developers are that you get to have someone wo
Maarten de Boer wrote:
Hello,
Yesterday, we gave a Tutorial called "Linux for Audio" at the AES
Convention, which took place here in Barcelona.
We put the slides at http://iua-share.upf.es/wikis/aes/ and tomorrow we
will add some photos. Of course suggestions are welcome!
great work, exce
On Fri, Jun 03, 2005 at 01:57:22PM +0200, Olivier Guilyardi wrote:
>
> I recognize using Midi is a good idea, at least for a prototype. But what
> if, in the future, I try to further analyse the input signal, so that I can
> modify the output not only according to the velocity level, but also
>
> Assembling piezo microphones, cardboard, foam, wood and a cymbal stand,
> I have just made my first DIY electronic pads. Actually it's electronic
> percussions, because I will play these mostly with hands.
>
> I've found a few sites about DIY "edrums" (1), as well as some detailed
> documentatio
Hi Frank,
Frank Barknecht wrote:
Thanks a lot, looks very cool. Regarding the software side: I've seen
OSC applications build with liblo run on PDAs, so even for weak
machines, OSC is no problem. Personally I would just patch something
together in Pd.
I've just put a sample online, containing
Arnold Krille wrote:
On Thursday 02 June 2005 17:19, Olivier Guilyardi wrote:
Frank Barknecht wrote:
We want pictures!! ;)
Here we go ;-)
http://www.samalyse.com/labs/edrum
cool things!
Will you make the software do velocity?
Can you give it further controls according to the position (s
Steve Harris wrote:
On Thu, Jun 02, 2005 at 09:55:45AM +0200, Thorsten Wilms wrote:
While you could record the trigger signal itself, MIDI or an OSC based
format would be more efficient for storage and would make tempo changes
easy.
MIDI would allow to use existing and ready to go apps like H