Digital Media Audio Blogs > Audio
The last time I started a blog with a quote from music technology guru Jim Aikin, it provoked an erudite uproar, which taught me a lot. So in honor of Jim’s latest feature for O’Reilly Digital Media, I thought I’d whack that beehive once more. Jim covers the Korg MS2000B and many more voice-twisting technologies in his article “How to...
Digital Media Blogs >
When a local elementary school produced a play about the California Gold Rush this spring, I volunteered to help with the audio—and got surprising results....
Digital Media Audio Blogs > Audio
As I receive more high-end audio software for review, the copy-protection dongles have been multiplying annoyingly. Swapping them in and out as I launched various programs and plug-ins was becoming a hassle. In one case, a program crashed the computer when I inadvertently quit it while its dongle was unplugged. Thanks to a tiny USB hub I picked up at...
Digital Media Audio Blogs > Audio
GDC, formerly known as the Computer Game Developers Conference, starts in earnest today, and there are scads of audio presentations. Although I’m not a gamer, I always come away from the conference with fascinating insights on the differences between “linear” and interactive music. For instance, in a game, the composer is often more akin to a sculptor than a painter,...
Digital Media Audio Blogs > Audio
MP3.com just published an interesting article on optimizing the battery life of digital audio players. The article concluded that copy-protected Windows Media Audio tracks knocked several hours off the playback time on each tested player. Savvy readers then pointed out that because WMA is more highly compressed, it naturally requires more processor power to play back. A more conclusive experiment...
Digital Media Audio Blogs > Audio
The QWERTY keyboard is a tricky interface for music-making, but many inventors have come up with equally tricked-out ways to overcome its limitations. Here are a few of my favorites. I’ve long been a fan of Mixman, which turned typing into synchronized grooves. But simply triggering samples doesn’t allow much expressivity, so the company eventually designed its own input controller,...
Digital Media Audio Blogs > Audio
Looking to do more with FireWire audio on Windows? CEntrance has released a free beta version of its universal audio driver. Among the features are device aggregation (which lets you use multiple FireWire audio interfaces with a single program) and multi-host capability (which lets multiple programs address a single interface). Those were among the top requests from developers at last...
Digital Media Audio Blogs > Audio
After getting annoyed by the way MP3 links work—blanking out the browser window or triggering a download dialog instead of simply playing music—I whipped up a JavaScript hack called “Build a Simple MP3 Player for Your Site.” That article has become one of our most popular, and we now use the technique throughout the O’Reilly Digital Media site. Several readers...
Digital Media Audio Blogs > Audio
Like microscopes, audio editing software can reveal amazing new worlds within everyday sounds. Check out “Winnoise,” for example. It’s a three-minute song made by manipulating Windows error sounds. I particularly like the way the artist looped portions of the Microsoft Sound to create a sustaining pad, and that he needed only basic commands from the lowly Windows Sound Recorder to...
Digital Media Audio Blogs > Audio
Need a creative kick-start -- or a royalty-free soundtrack? Try some of these algorithmic music programs.

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