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>From what I've understood the encoder is still Mac-based, though they've got plans to make a PC encoder sometime this year. Being a PC-based person, this is alas, only encouraging. :) ---------- > From: Kim Flint <kflint@chromatic.com> > To: Loopers-Delight@annihilist.com > Subject: Re: looped music/web > Date: Monday, April 28, 1997 1:12 PM > > At 03:47 PM 4/28/97 -0400, you wrote: > >Hi all, > > > >I recently possed the following question to Headspace about their new audio > >Netscape plug-in called Beatnik. > > > [interesting beatnik stuff] > > > >Has anyone tried playing back seamless loops from a PC using this plug-in? > > > > Just install it and go to the Headspace site. Thomas Dolby's walk-through > examples include several looped audio parts. Also good examples of > interactive audio on a web page. They also have links to demonstration sites > with more interesting stuff. I went to one created by a trip-hop dj that let > you control four parts of a mix, with the ability to change the audio > samples in different parts, as well as mixing and muting the different > channels. It was a blast! Another page let you essentially compose an > ambient piece interactively by starting up various audio samples and letting > them loop or go in and out, or whatever., all by interacting with a graphic > on the page. It was all incredibly cool. > > Another thing my girlfriend noticed, is that midi files from the web sound > fantastic through beatnik. I think they have their own sample library, which > replaces the crappy gm sounds we had through quicktime. I'm using it for all > web based audio now, and highly recommend it. > > kim > _______________________________________________________ > Kim Flint 408-752-9284 > VLSI Systems Engineering kflint@chromatic.com > Chromatic Research > >