-
Nice-looking Piezo buffer/amplifier.
-
Greatly enjoyed seeing – and playing – Luisa Pereira's _Counterpointer_ at Loop last week.
-
"The SSS-12 is probably the best hardwood sequencer to ever be put on water. An incredible machine, It stores and plays the last 12 hours of river samples. Custom circuits convert the saltiness of each sample into pitch, the more salt the higher the pitch, giving a sonic impression of the tidal cycle. With its wooden conveyor belt the SSS-12 automatically updates every hour so you always get to hear the last 12 hours of tidal activity."
Wonderful.
-
Interesting sequencer, but mainly: oh god I want that desk.
-
More "filed for further reference": Chrome has support for external MIDI devices now.
-
"I’ve attached a 16-step sequencer to the original Auduino lo-fi synth and have added 8 LEDs and 5 buttons to the original design, and thus the Groovesizer is born." Fun.
-
"We are currently developing a new synth DIY kit. No – it's not another mono synth but a full fledged digital drum machine with integrated step sequencer." ooh.
-
Music sequencing by drawing small towns: things by roads are noises; cars are your cursor. Currently in Flash; coming out for iOS soon. Worth checking out some of the best examples to see what's possible. It's a bit fiddly, but utterly delightful
-
"Hitotoki stores literary 'sketches' of moments you experience every day. No check-ins. No bullshit badges. We think the most interesting stuff happens in the space between places. Hitotoki is built to help you capture those moments."
-
Bookmarked because I'm fed up of watery allusions to this (last seen: Malcolm Gladwell, Freakonomics (which is annoying because it's watery despite Levitt having *worked on the paper*)). $5 for the *actual information* seems far more interesting than any volume of popular economics books.
-
Hard to explain, but a must-watch; lovely spatial music sequencer/toy. (And: I miss Offworld :( )
-
"The picture clearly shows the path of the sun through the sky over the last six months." Brilliant. (And: so simple!)
-
"Philip K. Dick fans from around the world have contributed to this scanned collection of over 650 PKD book covers." Some of these are awesome, from the crazy french covers for VALIS to the German editions of The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch – retitled as "LSD-Astronauten".