Physical Computing, Tangible Interface, TUI/NUI, Interactive Scultpure, Music Control, OSC
11.26.2011
Gesture Recognition on Resistive Touch Screens
...more information can be extracted from resistive touch screens by understanding and modeling the physics behind the process. When two touches occur, a segment of resistance from the passive screen, plus the resistance of the touch contacts, is paralleled with the conducting segment of the active screen, so the impedance seen by the supply is reduced and current increases..."
from: http://www.analog.com/library/analogDialogue/archives/45-06/gesture_recognition.html
11.22.2011
11.21.2011
Steganography 20 - Generate Melody from Text
This morning I was playing around with a soft-synth and didn't have a midi controller hooked-up -- so I was using the QUERTY keyboard to play notes. Then I realized I could type words and thereby make cute little melodies, that would repeat and had themes... pretty interesting sounds, actually. I liked the idea that these melodies could be decoded back into text (with a little effort).
A few googles later, bing!
Here is Hello World in C Major:
Read the whole article here: http://www.codeproject.com/KB/security/steganodotnet20.aspx
11.20.2011
6 Launchpads & Ableton
6 Launchpads makes for a huge playing surface with distinct areas of control.
11.19.2011
What I want for Chanukah
A deep-featured button controller coupled with cool slicy software PLUS 2 Stribe-like horizontal LED-festooned touch-strips to twiddle track position and needle drops - even supports a pinch input! Add monome-like sequenced sample chunking thingambobbery and you had me at hello! Check out Edison on this thing:
11.15.2011
Reactable for iPad / iPhone!
A very cool UI designed for one of the very first multi-touch tables is ported to iOS - a great combination!
11.14.2011
pissah controllah
What I really like about this controller is the combination of real knobs and an illuminated surface.
9.29.2011
4.26.2011
3.18.2011
Real audio and MIDI i/o for iPad?
Alesis Studio Dock aka iO Pro (per Alesis' site)
Game-changer? Could be! Purportedly solving the number one complaint of most iPad musicians - iO Pro adds "real" i/o to the iPad, providing a traditional hardware MIDI interface, USB/MIDI, 2 XLR inputs (w/ 48v phantom power on one channel), R+L 1/4" outputs, headphones out, a footswitch jack, trim pots in all the right places, an impedance switch on one input, and even composite Video out! Everything but, well, the iPad...
List is $399 but Sweetwater's catalog shows it at $199. Add an iPad (~$500 depending on your prefs) and this could be an affordable and flexible alternative for laptop musicians, or for musicians currently using the iPad primarily as a dumb controller for existing computer-based music apps.
Of course, much will depend on the availability and affordability of IPAD apps that can take advantage of these added i/o options. And it remains to be seen whether the quality of the audio produced by the combo actually turns out to be "Pro". Can't wait to get my hands on one!
More reading:
CreateDigitalMusic iPad app rundown
Other CDM articles on iPad apps
An in-depth look at io Dock @ MATRIXSYNTH
Game-changer? Could be! Purportedly solving the number one complaint of most iPad musicians - iO Pro adds "real" i/o to the iPad, providing a traditional hardware MIDI interface, USB/MIDI, 2 XLR inputs (w/ 48v phantom power on one channel), R+L 1/4" outputs, headphones out, a footswitch jack, trim pots in all the right places, an impedance switch on one input, and even composite Video out! Everything but, well, the iPad...
List is $399 but Sweetwater's catalog shows it at $199. Add an iPad (~$500 depending on your prefs) and this could be an affordable and flexible alternative for laptop musicians, or for musicians currently using the iPad primarily as a dumb controller for existing computer-based music apps.
Of course, much will depend on the availability and affordability of IPAD apps that can take advantage of these added i/o options. And it remains to be seen whether the quality of the audio produced by the combo actually turns out to be "Pro". Can't wait to get my hands on one!
More reading:
CreateDigitalMusic iPad app rundown
Other CDM articles on iPad apps
An in-depth look at io Dock @ MATRIXSYNTH
3.11.2011
The Missing Link OSC/MIDI Translator
"...a standalone hardware device which contains its own WiFi radio, and translates specially-coded OSC messages sent from your mobile device or computer into standard MIDI messages to control synthesizers, drum machines, mixers, digital audio workstations, or anything which responds to MIDI commands. It does this with low latency, high flexibility and configurability, and without the need for a computer anywhere in the control chain. Multiple wireless OSC devices may connect simultaneously to The Missing Link, making collaboration easy."
$150 pre-order: http://www.wifimidi.com/store/
11.30.2010
Hours of mindless fun (for free)
GlitchSequencer

GlitchSequencer is free software that allows you to create cellular automata to trigger MIDI and/or OSC. It can also be controlled by a monome:

SimpleSynth

For basic MIDI tasks, I use SimpleSynth, a lightweight MIDI instrument that is also a free download.
10.08.2010
Trying out slideshow plugins/services
This is some random pic off my desktop along with a randomly selected song.
They have a paid version that leaves it logo free and add titles I think.
9.11.2010
Circles
This is a video project I did over the summer using FinalCut Pro. The video is from www.archive.org and the sound is by phineus + twine. Andy's "sax" part is guitar thru a MIDI converter. The sequencing is all done on a Quasimidi 309 beatbox. The music ends when we throw too much MIDI at the 309 and it freezes-up.
6.16.2010
Max/MSP 2-way communication w/ iPod (or iPad!)

Fantastik from Pink Twins connects your iPod/iPod Touch, and soon iPad, to your Max/MSP music programs. And it's free. Uses the standard UDPSend and UDPReceive Max objects. The iPad version is on its way to AppStore...
5.25.2010
Livid Ohm 64 Review
More people should subscribe to the world's greatest Audio publication: TapeOp
My review of the Livid Ohm 64 is on page 58...

I previously reviewed the monome 40h, in my opinion still the best illuminated button controller ever, result of one of the most-inspiring DIY projects I know.
4.21.2010
4.08.2010
Stribe Proto sample mixing
This is a primitive Max/MAP sequencer app for mixing samples and triggering MIDI with the stribe. On-screen the grid sequencer triggers a sample to begin. Depending on tempo, more or less of the sample is played. Some short sounds are triggered repeatedly. Stopping the sequencer and/or removing trigger points allows sounds to continue playing to conclusion.
BTW this is an early Stribe Proto mod'd to run Curious Inventor firmware. A neat happy accident is that I can put the cursors and the level meters on the same LEDs.
Further Max programming is required to get toggle control over "chunks" of LEDs to add button-like effects (for loading samples, paging, etc).
Curious Inventor Stribe Quad demo
quad stribe Live looping mixer from CuriousInventor on Vimeo.
Scott @ Curious Inventor put together a nice demo mapping his Stribe to affect loops in Ableton Live... via Vimeo
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)







