Re: Biohacker Beats: Music of the MicroBiome
Yeah but you could do essentially the same thing by just writing a formula your self and maybe randomizing it right. I guess it's kinda interesting from an artistic point of view? Especially if it's used to get people to donate to a useful
Re: Biohacker Beats: Music of the MicroBiome
Yeah but you could do essentially the same thing by just writing a formula your self and maybe randomizing it right. I guess it's kinda interesting from an artistic point of view? Especially if it's used to get people to donate to a useful
Re: Biohacker Beats: Music of the MicroBiome
@3In a lot of ways, what they did is no different than how anybody else makes music, either with trash cans, stomping, hitting inanimate objects, etc. only in this case they use bacteria found on the human body to mix music in an arbitrary
Re: Biohacker Beats: Music of the MicroBiome
@3In a lot of ways, what they did is no different than how anybody else makes music, either with trash cans, stomping, hitting inanimate objects, etc. only in this case they use bacteria found on the human body to mix music in an arbitrary
Re: Biohacker Beats: Music of the MicroBiome
This type of thing has always kinda confused me. If you didn't know what it was, it would just sound like nonsensical crap, but because the source is interesting, suddenly people care.I admit to thinking it was kinda cool at one time as well
Re: Biohacker Beats: Music of the MicroBiome
On a somewhat different note, but Algorithmic arts has produced a little program for converting DNA and protein sequences to midi data. Though most of their software is not accessible, there's still some quite interesting info to be found.https
Biohacker Beats: Music of the MicroBiome
As reported by [gizmodo]:Digging further into the reaches of science based audio mixing, Biota Beats is a collective of biologists and biology enthusiasts who make music that explores the sound of the human microbiome. To do this, they sampled