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It looks nice and I may consider buying one for research purpose. But I know the price tag can be quite high for many. Maybe that's partially the reason that I believe free and open-source software is a form or music democratisation. I would invite those who are interested to try my live coding project in the browser:
https://glicol.org
I have been taking this project to different workshops and there will be more. The most unforgettable experience is that in one place, the host can only provide old laptops that can hardly run Chrome smoothly. It really makes me thinking. There are so many people excluded from music making due to the price tag.
On the one hand, it's exciting to see the exploration aestheticism, design and interaction. But on the other hand, we should really consider the democratisation of music tech.
have read some comments here:
> "They have the best designers, i feel like in the US we have no taste, i knew this couldn't be an American company." -- @iamricks
how about monome (https://monome.org/norns)?
@chaosprint
glicol is cool. another interesting live coding language is tidal (https://tidalcycles.org).
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