Hi Michael,

I was wrong. It’s howler.js (not howl.js):
https://howlerjs.com/

It would be ideal if the seamless looping could be accomplished with just html 
and css, but I couldn’t figure out how.

Some close relatives are experiencing increasing dementia, so maybe this 
upgrade is somehow a reaction against that.

http://punkygibbon.co.uk/images/h/huskerdu/everything_lp_950.jpg
http://lab404.com/misc/all_that_is_solid.gif

Best,
Curt


> On Jul 11, 2017, at 9:31 AM, Michael Szpakowski <m...@michaelszpakowski.org> 
> wrote:
> 
> This looks interesting Curt & I look forward to exploring it. I've loved the 
> whole series as long as I've known it
> You touch on something that affects many of us. A good deal of the stuff I've 
> made over the years simply doesn't work now.
> The tech is broken/ abandoned because the web has been straitjacketed into a 
> mechanism for the controlled extraction of money &/ promulgation of 
> advertising and beauty is not a consideration.
> Just the other day I was thinking about Director and how much I loved it and 
> how much you can do with it and how odd it is that it is now completely 
> marginal even though I'm not aware of a successor that gets even close to 
> what it could do...
> Could you say a tiny bit about the howl .js trick? A lot of my stuff used 
> looped embedded audio and gradually the alternatives for doing in this in a 
> browser have been gradually closed down ( I used .dcr then I used QT...then I 
> looked away and started painting and returned to a world that seems in many 
> ways unrecognisable)
> thanks for sharing this
> best wishes
> Michael
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