"TI just introduced a $20 microcontroller development kit in a usb drive that's probably up to the task. Check out the TI site for more info:"
http://www.ti.com/ez430


What would be really cool is if this were a DSP based drive so I could just plug it into a midi controller and play; with no PC, monitor or other. What would be even cooler is if my midi device automatically mapped it's controls according to the synth I was using. What would be even better? If soft synth developers and hardware manufacturers turned all of this into a standard.
Think of that. No OS dependencies that could mean the demise of most softsynths. For example, the Waldorf PPG Wave 2.v will not install on Windows XP. And... hardware based soft synths - you'd finally be able to run your soft synths like actual hardware synths. Another interesting thing is you'd have a wide variety of hardware controllers to chose from. Feel like a small portable device for the road or the couch, no problem, just plug in your USB device and go. MPC style controller, X0X, full weighted keys, knobs, sliders, you name it. You can't do that with hardware VAs.
Thanks goes to Doktor Future's and Jimmy's comments in this post on the Terratec Area 61.
We are all the genius innovators of tomorrows happy land.
ReplyDeleteIt's a very good idea. There are standards for USB audio and MIDI, and mass storage, so this device can just act as all three. It can have a folder called 'factory' and a folder called 'user' with standard structures too.
We could also have USB FX chips.
The problem of USB bandwidth would be solved by multiple USB 2.0 bus's.
There could be a 'bridge' unit that broke out audio AND CV signals in/out.
Let's design it together as a manifesto!
*puts on french beret and awaits the revolution*
TI just introduced a $20 microcontroller development kit in a usb drive that's probably up to the task. Check out the TI site for more info:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.ti.com/ez430
I think you guys are misreading the product description. While it's shaped like a USB flash drive, it has nothing to do with one. It's a device for configuring and testing a couple of models of microcontroller. While microcontrollers are sometimes used together in the same devices as dedicated DSP units, they're not the same thing. In fact, a microcontroller tends to have far, far less computing power than a general purpose PC; after all, they only cost a few dollars apiece. This new device might be useful as a building block for a controller, but next to useless for a synth.
ReplyDeletePlease see this post.
ReplyDeletehttp://jledger.proboards19.com/index.cgi?board=microhacking&action=display&thread=1159024762
Verl Burkart
aka. dilbert
Http://www.rebootretry.blogsopt.com