Wow...
I don’t usually listen to Radiohead, but for the Nude Remix competiton, this guy went one weirder than everyone else: http://www.vimeo.com/1109226?pg=embed&sec=1109226
Who else do you know who can play a bass part with their scanner?
I don’t usually listen to Radiohead, but for the Nude Remix competiton, this guy went one weirder than everyone else: http://www.vimeo.com/1109226?pg=embed&sec=1109226
Who else do you know who can play a bass part with their scanner?
Well, I figured I might as well put to good use the Arduino board board I purchased about a month back.
Being such an original person that I am, I’ve decided to come up with another Arduino monome clone. I intend to build a nice 8x8 button surface; the size is good because it means I’m not buying zillions of dollars worth of components - only 64, not 144 (on a 12x12 board) as I had originally planned, heh - and because it’s not too large, so you can grab it nicely with your hands and muck around. This’ll probably end up very similar to the OcTinct in way of end-result.
I’ve ordered most of the parts I’ll be using; that is, 9x 8-channel multiplexers for reading the buttons (yes, cheaper than 3x 16-channel multiplexers), 50 RGB LEDs (these were cheapies for $10 off eBay, probably not the best quality, considering the price and that they’re getting shipped from some random place in Hong Kong, but hey), 100 diodes to prevent key press information flowing back into our matrix; and four 4x4 button pads and breakout boards from SparkFun. I’ve yet to purchase the extra LEDs, mainly because I’m not sure about the quality of the ones I’ve already ordered, and the demuxers to feed the color data to the LEDs with. I’ll probably end up wiring up a single row of LEDs to test first, then go buy it out once I work out how I’m going to feed the data; remember, we have 3 channels of information with the LEDs (red, green and blue) rather than just one if we were going with the single colour ones, so that makes things a bit more annoying. I’ll probably just by more demuxers and handle the yucky stuff in the firmware.
I’m going to make it compatible with the same protocol used by the original monomes. At the least, this means it’s possible to use the same applications and (hopefully) some of the software used for the Monomes. I’ll probably extend it a bit by adding a few extra functions to the protocol, and manually modify applications (like snake) so that things come up in different colours.
I’ll probably pop an accelerometer on by default, and feed that to the software via the same way the Monome does it - keep in mind that the accelerometer hack is an aux input on that. I’d also looove to have direct MIDI out on the box, so you don’t need to lug around a laptop to do gigs. Need to figure out a way to map each key to a different note dynamically without a computer, though.
Any thoughts on a name, some sort of enclosing, or some other awesome features?
Edit: fixed up linkage.
Now, I’ll be honest. I haven’t bought much legitimate music lately, except for a couple albums I bought a few years back. I would buy LPs if I had a player that worked… But yes, shock, horror. I am a freeloader, to be fair.
Well, seeing as there was a multitude of songs that weren’t available on most P2P networks, I decided, hell, let’s at least have a look around and see if I could get songs elsewhere. Amazon’s MP3 downloads aren’t available in Australia, and iTunes is, well.. evil in so many different ways.
So, after looking around, I discovered Beatport (no, this isn’t one of those paid plugs, they’re just pretty cool). They provide a really large range of electronic music (incl. house, club, electro). The user interface is really nice, but it’s a bit annoying that they only provide Flash. But you can quickly go from song to song, artist to artist, finding songs you wouldn’t normally otherwise hear. It also provides 2-3 minute previews of songs (low quality of course). You can pay using PayPal or via credit card directly. What I did find annoying was that the songs are reasonably high priced to what I was expecting (something like from $1.49 for most tracks to $2.49 for newer ones), and that some tracks aren’t always available even though they’re in the catalogue, and some popular tracks they just don’t seem to have. Otherwise, I’ve been reasonably happy.
You can choose output formats of 320 Kbps CBR MP3, 192 Kbps VBR MP4 and 1141 Kbps WAV. They charge a WAV handling fee so that’s semi-lame, though, I can understand why.
If anybody has suggestions as to other similar websites, please comment and point me there. Also, anybody else used Beatport? What did you think of it?
I just noticed that the song Do It 2 Nite‘s chorus is a sample from SOS Band’s Take Your Time (Do It Right). However, there’s literally no attempt to make the sample any different from the other. All they did was speed it up a bit, increase the bass and add a highhat, and add some effects. Lame!
The fact that they got the credit for coming with a bouncy house track is even worse - the sample is basically the entire chorus. Appalling. Almost like Daft Punk’s Digital Love, though, I’d have to admit, at least they only used a few seconds of audio, rather than the whole damn chorus. Their Harder Better Faster Stronger use of Coca Cola Baby was pretty darn hard to beat, though; I think they’ve redeemed themselves.
Sorry, none for you, Rockefeller.
Good to see the Banshee crew push out a new release from the 0.13 series. Few minor improvements which make things a bit nicer, but generally Banshee ‘trunk’ is going to be the big one.
The new Last.fm playlist source is absolutely smashing. Cheers to Gabriel Burt for that. Last.fm the way it was meant to be.
Yes, it’s that damn good. Why else would I bother to blog? ;)
Why has nobody told me about this movie?
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It’s probably the coolest thing on the planet! Daft Punk’s best album IMHO (Discovery; however, Homework is still up there) as the soundtrack for a beautiful retro-looking anime. No speech, just awesome music and limited sound effects. Go on, watch it!