Hi Pall,
On 10/02/2014 04:45, Pall Thayer wrote:
This was a faculty grant at a US arts-focused college. I would say that
95% of students, 80% of faculty use Apple products. That really doesn't
matter though.
As you asked for feedback..
I think it does. I'm not proposing the usual (sterile) apple vs. xyz
flame, but I've noticed this "mac for music" thing in academia and
conservatoires over here (Italy). One thing that surprised me is the
attachment to this ecosystem in the electoacoustic music landscape,
where one would expect people to experiment as much as possible with
unknown and unfamiliar tools in all directions.
What is also interesting is to understand if the use of Apple products
and software (e.g. MAX/MSP) is truly justified by creative/artistic
needs or if it's just a matter of habit/convenience (this question in a
neutral way, i.e. nothing against convenience).
I'm not sure how (much) this fits in the topic you're going to address,
but I think it's an interesting angle to take into account. And I'll be
happy to share my personal experiences further if you think it's
interesting (as I guess my email was already rather long)
Ciao,
Lorenzo.
The project is out there. It can be ported to any
platform if people want. More than anything, it was a proof-of-concept
project.
If it bothers you that this was developed as an IOS app then, by all
means, take it and turn it into an Android app.
On Sun, Feb 9, 2014 at 10:29 PM, Simon Wise <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
On 10/02/14 13:36, Pall Thayer wrote:
This is where things enter into the odd world of academia. In
all honesty,
I think our application for the particular grant that was
available was an
"outlier". The grant came with caveats. Projects were to target
technology
that would likely be used by faculty and students and the
resulting work
(publications or, in our case, software) would be released under
open
licenses. As far as I could tell, ours was the only project that was
producing actual software. We were able to pay the Apple Dev fee
for one
year from our funds but our application wasn't ready for
distribution
within that time so we never submitted it to the app store and have
released the source code instead. We were never big fans of
distributing it
through the app store anyway.
Well I guess the target platform is jail-broken Apples then.
Re academia ... I spent the last few years studying in an Australian
university, maths and computing ... the students were a reasonable
mix of linux, mac and windows users, not sure about the android/iOS
split, while the staff and teaching had a somewhat stronger emphasis
on linux and open source than the students. Matlab was the main
exception to this.
As a target platform android certainly has a much bigger user base
worldwide than jail-broken iOS, though the apples may be much better
for some audio uses.
Simon
--
*****************************
Pall Thayer
artist
http://pallthayer.dyndns.org
*****************************
_______________________________________________
[email protected] mailing list
UNSUBSCRIBE and account-management ->
http://lists.puredata.info/listinfo/pd-list
_______________________________________________
[email protected] mailing list
UNSUBSCRIBE and account-management ->
http://lists.puredata.info/listinfo/pd-list