Audio and Video

Protracker module player for Web Audio and other music in browser

ProTracker was a very a popular freeware tracker for the Amiga platform. ProTracker allows the user to create sequences of notes called “patterns”, which are chained together to form a complete song. It is amongst the programs that first allowed for widespread creation of music without studio equipment (very popular in 1990′s). Music created in

Ingenious Little Thing to Apply Gaffa Tape

http://digg.com/video/if-youre-a-filmmaker-you-need-this-ingenious-little-thing This looks like a cool device. I have used enough many meters of gaffa tape years ago that I know how much this kind of device can potentially help. Making applying gaffa tape over cables easy will speed up system setup, help safety because you would not try to get without taping cables and

Audio jacks evolution to confusion

In the portable electronics market, cell phones and MP3 players have greatly expanded the use of headsets for listening to music, making phone calls, and watching videos. Connecting headphones to the 3.5 mm plug used to be easy some years ago when headphones were just headphones (still then you might sometimes need to check sometimes

Taylor Swift accidentally releases 8 seconds of white noise, tops Canadian iTunes chart – Your Community

http://www.cbc.ca/newsblogs/yourcommunity/2014/10/taylor-swift-accidentally-releases-8-seconds-of-white-noise-tops-canadian-itunes-chart.html What does this tell about state of pop-music industry? When a track containing nothing but eight seconds of white noise was accidentally released under the album’s name on Tuesday morning, it shot to the top of Canada’s iTunes chart almost immediately. It’s likely that many fans downloaded the song without listening to it first.

Audio off ground

EDN magazine has a very good article series on audio electronics related to ground loop issues (issue I have written myself in this blog and my ground loop documents). The article series is based on material that has originally appeared in Linear Audio, a book-format audio magazine published half-yearly by Jan Didden. The G word: