Yes, I have a Focus 40 Braille display. They are made by Freedom
Scientific, who also makes a screen reading product called JAWS. I use
a combination of speech and Braille to ensure speedy code reading so I
can get an idea of the algorithms or messages.
On 2/20/12, Jerry lancebo...@qwest.net
you're not related to Miller Puckett, are you?
just curious.
and you're still welcome to the group no matter the answer.
--
r b-j r...@audioimagination.com
Imagination is more important than knowledge.
--
dupswapdrop -- the music-dsp mailing list and website:
No, I'm not related to Miller Puckette.
On 2/21/12, robert bristow-johnson r...@audioimagination.com wrote:
you're not related to Miller Puckett, are you?
just curious.
and you're still welcome to the group no matter the answer.
--
r b-j r...@audioimagination.com
hey adam,
yep, that also includes me .. have you ever read curtis roads - the
computer music tutorial ? it was one of my main sources to get my
degree in ee .. maybe there is a translation to braille or a digital
version .. it is completely based on csound and i love it ..
cheers,
On 21/02/2012 15:43, Didier Dambrin wrote:
True, I've never been able to install or figure out CSound, or make it
do anything.
Watching on YT, I see it can do realtime stuff? I've always thought it
was all command-line offline stuff (last time I tried in 2007).
It's been real-time for at
Well. I need to start using csound. To actually do things in the real
world instead of just solving idle mind puzzles.
On Tue, Feb 21, 2012 at 10:02 PM, Victor victor.lazzar...@nuim.ie wrote:
i have been running csound in realtime since about 1998, which makes it what?
about fourteen years,
It's very easy to use Csound to solve idle mind puzzles! I think many
of us, certainly myself, find ourselves becoming distracted by the
technical work involved in making computer music, as opposed to the
superficially easier but in reality far more difficult work of
composing.
Regards,
Mike
On