SBEMU
awesome-livecoding
SBEMU | awesome-livecoding | |
---|---|---|
8 | 12 | |
545 | 2,442 | |
- | 2.0% | |
9.4 | 6.6 | |
19 days ago | about 1 month ago | |
C | ||
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | - |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
SBEMU
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Ventoy
What about FreeDOS?
FreeDOS with SBEmu is really nice for an instant DOS machine on real hardware:
https://github.com/crazii/SBEMU/releases
- Sbemu – Run your retro games with on board audio via Sound Blaster emulation
- I made a FreeDOS game USB!
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How would I install freedos on an old laptop
SBEMU is a game changer. You can now have sound-blaster support through emulation. It's not perfect but works surprisingly well (https://github.com/crazii/SBEMU)
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Past meets present in this $200 mini-laptop with a Intel 8088 chip and 640KB
DOS emulation is not a very battery-efficient way to play '88-98 games on the go, so projects like these seem to cater to that specific need, letting people run DOS natively. The Toshiba Libretto was a nice, small machine, but finding one in good condition is super hard. Toshiba Portégé was another, but after Pentium-II models, they took away the OPL3 card in favor of something more Windows-friendly (AC97), which doesn't have good DOS drivers. Now there's SBEMU (https://github.com/crazii/SBEMU), which can emulate SB/SBPRO/SB16 on top of newer PCI-based sound cards, including AC97 ones, solving that problem. Now it's possible to have sound on a Pentium-II, III, M and Atom machines running DOS, like a Sony Vaio P.
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Sleek PIII Tualatin Toshiba P2010 laptop
I am not familiar with the sound chip inside this laptop, but i recently discovered SBEMU, it may not be relevant, but it offers another soundblaster emulation option (for the correct hardware).
- Legacy sound blaster emulation for DOS
- Ask HN: What audio/sound-related OSS projects can I contribute to?
awesome-livecoding
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Strudel: A live coding platform to write dynamic music pieces in the browser
and there is more: https://github.com/toplap/awesome-livecoding
- How to start into coding generative music
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Ask HN: What audio/sound-related OSS projects can I contribute to?
The Awesome Live Coding list on Github would be a great place to start: https://github.com/toplap/awesome-livecoding/blob/master/REA...
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Sonic Pi – The Live Coding Music Synth for Everyone
https://github.com/toplap/awesome-livecoding
Live coding is how I learned to program and I am so glad that this type of computer music performance exists. I am currently doing my PhD on the topic! Programming as a performative act, with its own culture and music sub-genres. For those interested in helping / taking a look, I am currently trying to hack my own live coding environment based on Python asyncio mechanisms: https://github.com/Bubobubobubobubo/sardine I am a bit shy about it because I am light years behind the level of the projects that are posted on HN and that keep me inspired. I've taught myself how to do this basically by live coding ... a lot, with friends in France! Learning a bit of CS because of music.
- any good software suggestions?
- Glicol: Graph-oriented music live coding language written in Rust
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Manual algorithmic music (you supply the algorithm)
* https://github.com/toplap/awesome-livecoding
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Bespoke Synth 1.0 – open-source software modular synthesizer
Here's a list/overview of all things "live coding": https://github.com/toplap/awesome-livecoding
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Sonic Pi – Code based live music creation tool
Check out the Awesome Livecoding list for similar things: https://github.com/toplap/awesome-livecoding/blob/master/REA...
Also, Algorave for live performances: https://algorave.com/
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Alda – Text-Based Programming Language for Music Composition
Without commenting on Alda specifically, people should understand that it's just one member of this list of highly overlapping (but also interestingly distinct) tools:
https://github.com/toplap/awesome-livecoding
"All things live coding : A curated list of live coding languages and tools"
What are some alternatives?
Bela - Bela: core code, IDE and lots of fun!
vim-sonic-pi - Sonic Pi plugin for (Neo)Vim
avendish - declarative polyamorous cross-system intermedia objects
overtone - Collaborative Programmable Music
riffusion - Stable diffusion for real-time music generation
FoxDot - Python driven environment for Live Coding
DSP.jl - Filter design, periodograms, window functions, and other digital signal processing functionality
awesome-katas - A curated list of code katas
dosbox-x - DOSBox-X fork of the DOSBox project
Orca - Esoteric Programming Language
faustideas - A central place for Faust GSoC proposals, todo list and new ideas
extempore - A cyber-physical programming environment