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analoq

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Posts posted by analoq

  1. I could listen to this all da... OH MY GOD! IT'S FREAKING BREAKING APART!!

    hahaha, well said.

    I don't think I officially win until it's announced by Doulifee, but in the meantime:

    If anyone would like to pick a number between 1996 and 2002, as those are the years which most of my General MIDI files have been composed...

    cheers.

  2. Interesting editing contrast between the performers: the singer's verses have frequent cuts while the rapper's verses are done in single (Steadicam) shots. Also apt choreography when the singer's arms go down on "No valley too deep" and come up on "No mountain too high". I particularly enjoyed the rapper's finger wagging on "No no no no..." Lovely pinball mise en scéne as well.

    yes

  3. Is this an official OCR Project Album Mix? If not I would be willing to make another video for something else.

    What difference does it make? The compo rules allow for any OCReMix or any remix for a released OCR project. I believe everything you listed would be fair game for a music video.

    cheers.

  4. Can I just say; 90dB doesn't actually mean anything, it's an arbitrary number with no units.

    True but since dB is meaningless by itself, it is therefore generally considered to mean dB SPL. No pedantry necessary.

    Adding 3dBs is double whatever it was previously, as sound pressure levels vary a lot. (ie 53dBA is twice as loud as 50dBA in terms of sound pressure level)

    Are you thinking of dBv or other power dB measurements? SPL is 6dB per doubling/halving of magnitude.

    Anyways, I always recommend investing in a good pair of earplugs. Ones that will have a hole in them for allowing attenuated high frequencies to pass so instead of everything sounding "muffled" it just sounds quieter. They are especially nice to use at the cinema for one reason: All you hear is the film! You don't hear the obnoxious adolescents talking amongst themselves or other audience noise.

    cheers.

  5. I'm going to have to say no again. Life is still not forgiving enough for me to have time for this. But I see this as a way for my ideas to germinate further... or my mood develop into rancor, I'm not sure.

    You're giving up already? I'm not going to pretend to know what's going on in your life, but, the listening party is August 29th. That's... still pretty far away.

  6. The root source is vgm.hcs64.com. Obviously, we would need some mirror and not using that actual site (don't want to leech bandwidth), but having something like that online, organized, do you think it could be feasible, analoq? I'm assuming that is a step in the right direction towards the organization the C64 scene has.

    That is indeed a step in the right direction. It's all feasible, there's no difficulties technology-wise. Even so, building and maintaining such an app would be a lot work. Enough work that I couldn't possibly offer to do it for free; the app would have to be priced to recoup the time & money* invested in it. I don't know how the hcs64 folks would feel about that. It may be simpler (even though less user friendly) to have users go the iPhone Explorer route. *shrug* There's a lot to think about.

    *it costs $100/year to host an app on the app store

  7. Heh, the problem is this, though: we can complain about the lack of support and apps til the cows come home (I can't believe I used that phrase), but unless we're planning on doing any of this coding ourselves, we're still just banking on other people doing it for us. So does anyone know, or know anyone who knows, what they're doing with looking into this kind of coding?

    Oh I've done more than a bit of iPhone programming. Developing an NSF or other soundchip player wouldn't be difficult, existing player code could be ported - it's more a problem of user experience.

    You illustrate in your earlier post the reason a SIDplayer works out on the iPhone: Because it doesn't sync to your computer, it syncs to a central repository (HVSC) over the web. The C64 scene is very sophisticated with this; there's nothing similar for NSFs/SPCs/etc.

    There's no easy/official way to sync data to the iPhone outside of iTunes, which won't let you sync NSFs. Users would have to leverage something like iPhone Explorer to place their NSFs on their phone.

    In summary: It's doable, but it wouldn't have the cleanest of implementations.

  8. Follow these steps:

    1. Take a video game MIDI file

    2. Run it through an orchestral sample library

    3. Post it to YouTube with game footage. [highlight]Important:[/highlight] Don't credit the original MIDI author.

    What do you get? You get the ForgottenFactory YouTube channel.

    You see kids, before OCR existed I would transcribe video game music to MIDIs and post them on the web. Not taking kindly to their behavior, I attempted a debate on their channel but they have a habit of deleting my posts. Oh well.

    Now, MIDI rips are a dime a dozen, so why am I singing this guy out on OCR? Well, they appear to be targeting fans of OCReMix with their friend invite spam. Not a big deal, but I thought I'd give folks a heads up anyway.

    cheers.

  9. Nor do I claim to know what the best solution is. My prediction in the previous compo was we'd get a half-dozen entries... and we got a half-dozen entries. Good guess - or maybe I've just been around long enough to know what to expect.

    I do not denigrate the potential benefits of a longer compo period. What I'm getting at is for every potential benefit there is a potential risk: You're not just giving participants more time to work on their entry, you're giving them more time to lose interest in it. You're not just giving people more time to become aware of the compo, you're giving them more time to forget about it.

    There's no 'correct' deadline; there are always pros and cons. However there's often a 'sweet spot' and I simply don't feel 4 months is it. What of it? Well nothing, really. This conversation is purely academic... but I guess we've got time for it (:

    cheers.

  10. I'm well aware of the difficulties in coordinating amateur projects. I use the Thriller example without any ignorance; the point is that no one is expecting or attempting a Thriller. Compo veterans understand how limitations can and do encourage creativity.

    The previous compo ran for 2 months and I don't think anyone would say we failed to get a creative set of entries. I just want to dispel any expectations that by doubling the running time we're going to double the quantity or quality of offerings.

  11. I think the playlist link is still wrong, it takes me to the playlist page in my account.

    "The only way to lose is to not participate" ~just64helpin

    I believe that's paraphrased from the compo:ThaSauce motto, which I adapted from the days when I was being instructed in the ways of jazz improvisation; after giving up half-way thru a tragic solo my teacher encouraged me with "The only wrong note is the one you don't play."

    So I'm hoping everyone able will be encouraged to participate.

    cheers.

  12. What makes compos interesting are the limitations one works with. Most often, you are limited by time and you have to do your best to come up with something cool in a short amount of time.

    One third of a year, to me, seems like too long to make things interesting. I doubt the production time for Thriller was much longer than four months.

    But even though I think this should've been pushed back more, I am glad to see it and am looking forward to hopefully another great batch of entries.

    cheers.

  13. Could Apple have planned something like this maybe?

    It's not unprecedented, I recall an article about how Apple deliberately "leaks" information about upcoming products for a combination of reasons:

    a) To generate hype

    B) To see how people react to certain ideas. (market research)

    c) To steal the thunder from a competitor's product

    I'm thinking this leak may be deliberate. If not, Apple's legal department probably would've been all over gizmodo by now. Just a few days ago Apple legal had macrumors.com take down information about their serial numbering scheme within hours of posting it.

    cheers.

  14. In the 1930s, the electric Hammond organ was considered controversial. Why? It had bass pedals! Bass players thought no one would hire them and instead just hire an organ player to play both keys and bass. The musicians union at the time went so far to demand that if you hired an organ player, you must hire a bass player as well.

    That may sound silly now, but this same technophobia continues to run deep in the music world toda. So I, for one, commend OverClocked ReMix for their courage in adopting generative/intelligent algorithmic composition/arrangement techniques. I have studied this technology at great lengths so am I elated to see it being brought to the video game music masses.

    cheers.

  15. I thought we were avoiding youtube for reasons of quality loss

    YouTube supports up to 1080p now. As long as you encode at a good bit-rate there'll be no perceptible quality loss.

    early video leakage,

    You can make your video private or viewable only by The Biznut until the viewing party if you want that kind of security.

    and potential audio/video de-synch;

    This usually happens due to poorly supported video/audio codecs or container formats. If you follow this advice you won't have this issue.

    I see where majority vote lies here.

    YouTube is the 4th most popular site on the web, right behind Yahoo, so everyone's familiar with it.

    It is the best available option.

    cheers.

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