mt32-pi
mycroft-core
mt32-pi | mycroft-core | |
---|---|---|
33 | 212 | |
1,172 | 6,461 | |
- | 0.3% | |
2.5 | 0.0 | |
10 months ago | 15 days ago | |
C++ | Python | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
mt32-pi
-
Something between Rpi and Rpi Pico?
I have just seen https://github.com/dwhinham/mt32-pi but it doesn't seem as easy to play with and well-documented as the other software I've used.
-
Attempting to learn MS-DOS; Here's my DOS Gaming Box!
Cool system. I'd see if you can get a hold of a Roland MT-32 type synth. If your sound card has a daughterboard connector (it does, top right corner) you can get a Serdaco Wavetable board which would let you have generalMIDI output. An external MT-32 or a mt32-pi will also greatly improve your music output.
- Electronic music icon Korg makes music with Raspberry Pi
-
Roland MT-32 Emulation
Regardless the best option is a MT32-pi solution. https://github.com/dwhinham/mt32-pi/wiki/Custom-hardware
-
Sound canvas / tone generator
I think MT-32 and SC-55, at least, are wildly overpriced for what they are from a music perspective, thanks to the retro gaming bubble. If you want to mess around with one, I would recommend checking out mt32-pi. In addition to the extremely limited MT-32 sound palette, it can also load soundfonts, which really opens things up a lot.
-
Raspberry Pi in synths?
Check out Mini-Dexed and MT32-Pi. I use both and they're great. They are built on the bare-metal "circle" platform, so they don't run on top of linux (so no faffing about with JACK routing, etc.).
- Ask HN: What cool projects do you suggest I build with a Raspberry Pi 2W
-
My take on the MiniDexed - first synth-diy project completed
its a CJMCU 5102 DAC Board, which is one of the supported soundcards. You can use the internal headphone jack of the Pi as well, however it only supports 12bit PWM audio there, which is usable but has a lot of artifacts and I would not recommend therefore
-
I'm not sure where else to post this but I need a bit of help.
You can turn a Raspberry Pi into a Yamaha DX7 using MiniDexed or a Roland MT-32 using mt32-pi (which also loads soundfonts via FluidSynth). I use both of these regularly. They're great. Both work with USB MIDI controllers with no additional hardware required and boot headlessly in a few seconds to work like a true instrument.
- Dexed FM synthesizer similar to DX7 running on bare metal Raspberry Pi
mycroft-core
-
Rabbit R1, Designed by Teenage Engineering
It's indeed suspicious. You're sending your voice samples, your various services accounts, your location and more private data to some proprietary black box in some public cloud. Sorry, but this is a privacy nightmare. It should be open source and self-hosted like Mycroft (https://mycroft.ai) or Leon (https://getleon.ai) to be trustworthy.
-
Finally! Kernel 6.6.6 has been released
Shouldn't this be Mycroft on this sub?
-
Mycroft
I was expecting this to be about Mycroft the AI assistant ( https://mycroft.ai/ ).
- Ask HN: Is there any open source/open hardware Echo Dot alike?
-
Coral TPU Dev Board for speech-to-text and nvidia agx as host running LLaMA??
But I would recommend writing some proper glue logic in Python and use the socket function for communication. But if you really want to get rid of Alexa, it's probably worth it to set up mycroft.ai or another open source assistant.
-
Matter hasn't revolutionized the smart home yet, but AI may be about to change that - the TechRadar article claims most people don't have smart homes, just connected homes.
https://mycroft.ai/ is a sophisticated open source replacement for Siri/Alexa … you can buy their premade hardware version for $399
-
Local AI -- A semi-reliable copy of human knowledge that can live in a box in your kitchen
To add home automation, consider something like Mycroft (https://mycroft.ai/)
- Using LLaMA as a "real personal assistant"?
-
Show HN: Willow – Open-Source Privacy-Focused Voice Assistant Hardware
This project reminds me of MyCroft https://github.com/MycroftAI/mycroft-core.
-
Is Voice AI safe?
Tldr either way it depends, but if it's free, your data is prob the real product. If you don't want to get data mined, check out https://mycroft.ai
What are some alternatives?
munt - A multi-platform software synthesiser emulating pre-GM MIDI devices such as the Roland MT-32, CM-32L, CM-64 and LAPC-I. In no way endorsed by or affiliated with Roland Corp.
rhasspy - Offline private voice assistant for many human languages
stm32mp1-baremetal - Baremetal framework and example projects for the STM32MP15x Cortex-A7 based MPU
Leon - 🧠Leon is your open-source personal assistant.
Arduino-USBMIDI - Allows a microcontroller, with native USB capabilities, to appear as a MIDI device over USB to a connected computer
kalliope - Kalliope is a framework that will help you to create your own personal assistant.
EspTinyUSB - ESP32S2 native USB library. Implemented few common classes, like MIDI, CDC, HID or DFU (update).
jasper-client - Client code for Jasper voice computing platform
zynthian-sys - System configuration scripts & files for Zynthian.
jarvis - Jarvis is a simple IA for home automation with (multi-languages) voice commands written in Python.
Main_MiSTer - Main MiSTer binary and Wiki
J.A.R.V.I.S-project - A decent attempt to recreate J.A.R.V.I.S. from MCU's Iron Man, complete with machine learning (specifically, intent classification) [Moved to: https://github.com/Joe-Lyu/J.A.R.V.I.S-project]