Hey Damian, The gluiph was just that, it ran Pd directly on a DSP: http://www.nime.org/proceedings/2003/nime2003_180.pdf
Depending on your skills, it could be easier to run a über-stripped OS like I did on the Palm Pilots, which ran Pd tho they had 32megs of RAM. There wasn't much more than the linux kernel, a super basic X11 server, and Pd. .hc On Apr 2, 2012, at 8:04 AM, Damian Stewart wrote: > hi alls, > > i'm investigating possibilities for a general purpose audio hardware device > based on a DSP chip. > > i know about Pd-anywhere and Hans-Christoph Steiner's efforts to get Pd to > run on older devices. this is not my goal here as i'd like to avoid having to > load an entire operating system, if possible; i really just need the DSP code > and a way of running it on a DSP chip. > > is there any way of getting Pd to compile patches internally to some kind of > DSP machine code, for example for something like a TI C5x? > > if not, does anyone know of anything vaguely similar that might get me > partway along to this goal? it doesn't have to load Pd patches necessarily, > but there are obvious benefits to being able to do that :-) > > cheers > damian > -- > damian stewart . @damian0815 . dam...@frey.co.nz > frey . contemporary art . http://www.frey.co.nz > > > _______________________________________________ > Pd-dev mailing list > Pd-dev@iem.at > http://lists.puredata.info/listinfo/pd-dev ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- "We have nothing to fear from love and commitment." - New York Senator Diane Savino, trying to convince the NY Senate to pass a gay marriage bill _______________________________________________ Pd-dev mailing list Pd-dev@iem.at http://lists.puredata.info/listinfo/pd-dev