Screw the O-scope being driven by the L and R channels of a sound card. Instead apply the same idea to solenoids (I'm thinking modified piezo speakers) attached to an itty bitty mirror, and then attach that rig to a headphone jack, and align that with a half decent laser. If you can make the wave files into MP3 and have them work, you have a device that makes any iPod or similar portable media player into a controller for a laser show. If done right, the whole thing should be pocket sized. :D
I'm not shure what you mean by "functions" but I can simply count the modules used in the two patches (vectorvideo and drums) when I come home. Of ocurse the modules are grouped into subfunctions (ball, cubemaker, shaker etc) if that's what yuou mean.
What you see are two outputs from the NM directly going into the scope set in XY mode. The scope is a old trusty Hitachi. I believe it's a 20MHz scope.
The song that is playing was just flat out screaming to be used as the new "Rick roll"
so sorry but yeah I kinda told a few people to look at the video. For the wrong reason. I like the song playing but seriously it gets a god bunch of puzzled faces and general crackups.
The concept of using an oscilloscope for a screen though is rather good though.
Ah thanx, As i wrote earlier it 's just a simple rythm I put together inside the nordmodular. A normal drummachine patched thru one or if it was two different dist modules to shape the sound. Then the sound is feed to the scope patch.
Drummachines are fun!
Oh yeah, I use the rythm in one of my tracks so it's in use already.
It's a modular synthesizer - a Clavia Normodular - running a patch that draws a ball that moved to the eight locations of a 3D-cube. The drummachine patch you hear runs on a different 'channel' (or slot if you speak nordmodularish). The sound from the drummachine moves and 'rocks' the cube around.
This vectordrawing technology is how old videogames used to work.
I also have a working patch of the games Pong with collision detection, sound and all.
Screw the O-scope being driven by the L and R channels of a sound card. Instead apply the same idea to solenoids (I'm thinking modified piezo speakers) attached to an itty bitty mirror, and then attach that rig to a headphone jack, and align that with a half decent laser. If you can make the wave files into MP3 and have them work, you have a device that makes any iPod or similar portable media player into a controller for a laser show. If done right, the whole thing should be pocket sized. :D
pauljs75 1 year ago
how is that done?
hiyaitsmejoel1 2 years ago
WOW! That Was Delicious! ---Very tasty screen on that -scope of yours!
19andrew80 3 years ago
hhhhhhhmmm! how many functions did you use?
I thinks its an externally functions used!!!
I think that s yer osci got maybe at most 50 MHz, cause its look really like an old model!
hosepe03 3 years ago
I'm not shure what you mean by "functions" but I can simply count the modules used in the two patches (vectorvideo and drums) when I come home. Of ocurse the modules are grouped into subfunctions (ball, cubemaker, shaker etc) if that's what yuou mean.
What you see are two outputs from the NM directly going into the scope set in XY mode. The scope is a old trusty Hitachi. I believe it's a 20MHz scope.
Slorv 3 years ago
The song that is playing was just flat out screaming to be used as the new "Rick roll"
so sorry but yeah I kinda told a few people to look at the video. For the wrong reason. I like the song playing but seriously it gets a god bunch of puzzled faces and general crackups.
The concept of using an oscilloscope for a screen though is rather good though.
DJDigitalMonster 4 years ago
Ah thanx, As i wrote earlier it 's just a simple rythm I put together inside the nordmodular. A normal drummachine patched thru one or if it was two different dist modules to shape the sound. Then the sound is feed to the scope patch.
Drummachines are fun!
Oh yeah, I use the rythm in one of my tracks so it's in use already.
Slorv 4 years ago
wicked!
gloomez 4 years ago
ROCKS!!!
erpetanthropos 4 years ago
How. The. Hell. Did. You. Do. That??
!!
AdamuSensei 4 years ago
It's a modular synthesizer - a Clavia Normodular - running a patch that draws a ball that moved to the eight locations of a 3D-cube. The drummachine patch you hear runs on a different 'channel' (or slot if you speak nordmodularish). The sound from the drummachine moves and 'rocks' the cube around.
This vectordrawing technology is how old videogames used to work.
I also have a working patch of the games Pong with collision detection, sound and all.
Slorv 4 years ago
Thanks for your info!! --Much appreciation here!
19andrew80 3 years ago
Wowzers! This gives the oscilloscope a new meaning.
Aeryk333 4 years ago
ABSOLUTELY FUCKING AWESOME !
My god man ! WELL DONE, this is pure ART !
LOVE IT !
Blusage08 4 years ago
This has been flagged as spam show
wtf is an oscilloscope
mastershake100 4 years ago
Use google ignorant beast.
succhiello 4 years ago 10
cool
SeinKraft 4 years ago