Raspberry Pi Orchestra: Difference between revisions

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The Raspberry Pi is cheap enough that it could be used instead of instruments in a school orchestra. Each one needs a small speaker, but not necessarily a screen - either a mouse or keyboard can control sound synthesis. If some devices had screens, they could be used to "conduct" (via a shared network clock signal, with tempo variations as appropriate), or even distribute code for remote execution elsewhere. A technical approach to synthesising good quality sound can build on the source code for the recently released Sonic Pi, and networking ideas can be borrowed from international laptop orchestras (PB_UP offers code distribution):
The Raspberry Pi is cheap enough that it could be used instead of instruments in a school orchestra. Each one needs a small speaker, but not necessarily a screen - either a mouse or keyboard can control sound synthesis. If some devices had screens, they could be used to "conduct" (via a shared network clock signal, with tempo variations as appropriate), or even distribute code for remote execution elsewhere. A technical approach to synthesising good quality sound can build on the source code for the recently released Sonic Pi, and networking ideas can be borrowed from international laptop orchestras (PB_UP offers code distribution):
https://esp-mcmaster.wikispaces.com/Laptop+Orchestra+bibliography
https://esp-mcmaster.wikispaces.com/Laptop+Orchestra+bibliography
[[Category:Raspberry Pi]]

Latest revision as of 07:57, 11 October 2013

The Raspberry Pi is cheap enough that it could be used instead of instruments in a school orchestra. Each one needs a small speaker, but not necessarily a screen - either a mouse or keyboard can control sound synthesis. If some devices had screens, they could be used to "conduct" (via a shared network clock signal, with tempo variations as appropriate), or even distribute code for remote execution elsewhere. A technical approach to synthesising good quality sound can build on the source code for the recently released Sonic Pi, and networking ideas can be borrowed from international laptop orchestras (PB_UP offers code distribution): https://esp-mcmaster.wikispaces.com/Laptop+Orchestra+bibliography