helio-sequencer
tasks
helio-sequencer | tasks | |
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17 | 157 | |
3,006 | 3,290 | |
1.2% | 2.6% | |
9.0 | 9.6 | |
about 24 hours ago | 5 days ago | |
C++ | Kotlin | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | 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.
helio-sequencer
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Helio: Libre Music Composition Software
I downloaded this and played around with it a little.
I’m a little skeptical of something that ditches traditional music notation for piano roll, doesn’t offer any ways to reorganize sections of your song, and then gives you a bunch of tools for key signatures, modes, polymeter, and microtonal music. I’m trying to think of a programming analogy—it’s like checking out a new programming language that has dependent types, higher-kinded types and monads, and a borrow checker, but no strings or integers.
It’s really easy for those of us with analytical, mathematical minds to go diving into the more esoteric parts of music theory. Set theory, microtonality and alternative tuning systems, esoteric scales and cataloging all these different scales—but then you fuck up the basics or miss them completely. I noticed that the “major” scale is only available under its more esoteric name, the “ionian” scale, and then there are five different versions of locrian to choose from, not counting the ones outside 12-EDO.
https://github.com/helio-fm/helio-sequencer/blob/develop/Res...
Even with all these esoteric features, there is no such thing as, say, Eb. There is only D#. As programmers, we really want to normalize all our data so that it’s represented in exactly one way, but as a musician I like having both sharps and flats around. They’re convenient and make the music easier to read.
This is a neat tool for playing around with scales and tunings, but it seems like absolute hell to try and write music this way.
- Helio FM – libre music composition software
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MIDI editor for Linux?
Not really a DAW (more towards a sequencer), and haven't used this software for a year+ to comment on its current state but we have Helio Workstation.
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Seriously, don’t underestimate GarageBand
Helio is another cross-platform option, more streamlined and even more powerful.
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What’s the best open source electronic music production software?
Helio
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What's a good midi music creator I could use?
Well if you don't want a daw you could try https://helio.fm/
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⟳ 1 apps added, 22 updated at f-droid.org
Helio (version 3.8): Music sequencer, designed to be used on all major platforms
- is there any FOSS app for audio editing?
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how do you notate music pieces
I love MuseScore and want a decent notation editor for my tablet, but pickings are slim, unfortunately. Most of the editors I find have abhorrent interfaces. I'd even be fine with a LilyPond frontend or something, rather than what I do now (Helio is truly wonderful and ticks my boxes, but can't produce notation).
- Helio Project: libre music composition software
tasks
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Which todo apps do you use?
I'm curious, did you mean https://tasks.org/ or something else?
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Welche ToDo-App nutzt ihr?
Kalender mit CalDav und der App "Tasks" auf Android
- Tasks.org – Open-Source To-Do Lists and Reminders
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⟳ 4 apps added, 72 updated at f-droid.org
Tasks.org: Open-source To-Do Lists & Reminders (version 13.6): Fork of Astrid Tasks & To-Do List
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Intel 5105 mini-ITX homelab
tasks for Tasks.org mobile
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Starting from the blank canvas, trying to be lazy, and other insights from the 1st week
I thought it was a great idea to find out how certain features are implemented in other people’s projects. I know two open-source apps that are similar to what I want to build: uhabits and tasks.org.
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I feel like I made a mistake investing professionally into Flutter
I think it really depends on what your definition of "productive" is.
Let me try and quantify it. I looked through my apps that I installed from F-Droid, then looked at their GitHub issues and picked one [0]. I bet I could implement that in less than a week with 0 Android development experience.
> Every Android version is basically a reboot in many parts of the framework, the device fragmentation is hardly any better than J2ME days, several features are only documented via samples or Google IO talks, Gradle plugins require rewrites between upgrades, and each Android Studio release is a box of surprises what quirks it has.
Does any of that really matter if you're hiring someone into an existing org? Doesn't Android have amazing backwards compatibility? I'm sure I have some dice app from 2012 that still runs. The company is probably targeting some version of Android and isn't changing to the latest one every time a new version is released.
[0] https://github.com/tasks/tasks/issues/2435
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Tags not syncing with DecSync CC
Edit: and neither do some other features such as 'Filters'. I was aware that some of the features would not sync since that was mentioned in the tasks.org website. But I did not expect this to happen since the website specifically says that tags are synced with DecSync CC.
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Task app for iOS
I just kept bringing up replacing Synology with Nextcloud because of the reminder sync issue and the superior web app. If you don't rely heavily on reminders then its not a huge deal. You can read more about this at https://github.com/tasks/tasks/issues/1802
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Just settled into TickTick
I've been trying out a TON of GTD-related apps over the years and recently settled on tasks.org to complement Google Tasks. Honestly, this is an amazing app, but it lacks features that I really want: A Web interface and integration with other applications. Then a week ago, I moved to Todoist, and while it worked great and provided much of what I wanted, its free account limitations were apparent. Bummer, as I didn't want to pay what they ask for a premium account.
What are some alternatives?
seq66 - Seq66: Seq24-based live MIDI looper/editor. v. 0.99.12 2024-01-13. NSM support; Linux/Windows/FreeBSD; PDF user manual. Help access to tutorial and PDF. Beta code in portfix branch.
nextcloud-deck - 📋 Android client for nextcloud deck app
snapdrop-android - Android client for local file sharing via https://snapdrop.net/ and https://pairdrop.net
termux-widget - Termux add-on app which adds shortcuts to commands on the home screen.
fdroidclient
khal - :calendar: CLI calendar application
toc2 - Metronome app
EteSync Server - The Etebase server (so you can run your own)
jellyfin-android - Android Client for Jellyfin
Kuroba-Experimental - Free and open source image board browser
AccA - Acc app allows to edit acc config file and add a tile to start and stop acc deamon
todo.txt-cli - ☑️ A simple and extensible shell script for managing your todo.txt file.