Krzysztof Foltman wrote:
> On 14/04/12 16:15, Sebastian Moors wrote:
>
> I love the idea. Might want to build one myself, if I wasn't so awful 
> with soldering iron and even worse with things like PCB etching.
Same goes for me. Mostly i hurt myself when i try to solder something :) 
But the layout looked not that hard and it was build on a breadboard, so 
there is no need to etch (at least not if you don't want a 
production-ready product).
>
> I still think the most difficult and expensive part is the 
> "mechanical" parts like case/enclosure, the material for pads and 
> things like that. Any ideas for solving that using cheap off-the-shelf 
> parts? I guess that's going to be different between countries, or at 
> least between continents.
Hm, here in germany you can order cases for around 10€ from electronic 
suppliers. Wolke said something about his supplier, but i forgot the 
name. Maybe he can clarify things..
>
> Another possible direction, maybe less h2-oriented, would be to couple 
> the drumbody with some drum sampler program running on a raspberry pi 
> or something similar. Might be a modified h2, but optimizing the 
> Hydrogen engine for low-power slow-FPU arch like ARM11 might be more 
> difficult than writing a simple integer-based thingy from scratch. 
> Still, the end result would be a self-contained open-source instrument.
Yes, the raspberry pie looks promising. I'm going to try to port 
hydrogen to it (and, sigh, QT5) if alsa becomes available on it.
- Sebastian


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