Il 01/04/19 12:24, Matteo Croce ha scritto:

These are all cases when the aural errors framework comes to help. This
framework adds to the kernel a generic library to play sounds, which can
be used to report errors or generic events.

hello Matteo,

this reminds me of a hack that Mr. Ferruccio Zulian (chief system architect for Olivetti, General Electric, Honeywell and IBM from 1965 to 1990) told us about during an interview we made for our computer art exhibition "bin/art"

When testing the hardware of a new system, back in the mid-60s, the engineers hooked audio output to circuitry for debugging purposes.

They kept in mind how a set of correctly executed operations **literally** sounded like and therefore they were able to detect errors in later executions when something sounded "wrong".

This was way more easy than looking at the light panels commonly used for similar debugging activities, as listening to sounds does not force you to be in a particular place, looking at a particular object.

As explained in the interview, an interesting side effect of this hack led to the early computer music experiments with Pietro Grossi (a real giant in contemporary and electronic music) that ended up in the recording "GE-115 concerto" 7 inch vinyl, distributed as christmas gift to all Olivetti/General Electric employees in 1967.

here's the link to a webpage with the interview (in italian)

https://binart.eu/ge-115-concerto/

and to the recording itself

side A: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CXosSsSekaU
side B: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bf8jMA_zizc


...so, what does this curious anectode say to us?

it looks like history is on the side of this patch :-)

hope it gets in the mainline code!


Ciao!
Emiliano Russo
---------------
Museo Interattivo di Archeologia Informatica (MIAI)
Museo dell'Informatica Funzionante (MusIF)

Computer Musea :-)

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