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Ptcollab Alternatives
Similar projects and alternatives to ptcollab based on common topics and language
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qTox
Discontinued qTox is a chat, voice, video, and file transfer IM client using the encrypted peer-to-peer Tox protocol.
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InfluxDB
Power Real-Time Data Analytics at Scale. Get real-time insights from all types of time series data with InfluxDB. Ingest, query, and analyze billions of data points in real-time with unbounded cardinality.
ptcollab reviews and mentions
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Not sure if this is the right place to ask - help with PXtone
Cave Story OST is not made with PxTone, but with OrgMaker. But, there's a fork of PxTone called ptcollab that was recently updated to be MIDI kryboard compatible. And yes, the original PxTone Collage can read thr files made with ptcollab. Ptcollab is a much better experience overall.
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Ptcollab Kitchen Sink Edition
ptcollab (pxtone collab) is a music editor where you can collaborate with friends.[0]
[0] https://yuxshao.github.io/ptcollab/
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Show HN: Composing Studio – An online, collaborative editor for music notation
This is super exciting! I've been exploring this space of collaborative music editing too (and will shameless plug a multiplayer piano roll DAW I worked on [1]) and had some thoughts.
1. When collabing with friends it was slow for us to iterate because we (and a lot of people) just send files back and forth. It was hard to sketch things out without having some other kind of whiteboard. Of course others who can communicate musical ideas better through words probably would handle this a lot better.
2. Multiplayer editing was really fun in comparison. The magical moment is when you're working on some section and you listen to the song again and you realize someone else has added something on top of what you were doing earlier. It's like the song has taken on a life of its own.
3. Even with multiplayer it's still hard to coordinate and you can't get around planning even with rich tools. If the song was gonna be serious and not just doodles, we usually had to voice-chat to discuss what'll go in each section, then sorta divvy up parts. I guess the upshot is that even with the ability to be 'maximally' present with others, many people, myself included, work best with some amount of private creative freedom.
When I jammed in a bigger group, flows like relays or Monsquaz swap [2] that gave people that freedom, then at specific moments let them intermingle, seemed to work best for getting something out at the end. (If it was a free-for-all people usually ended up doing their own thing in some measures they staked for themselves out in the roll. Or otherwise people just spammed meme songs like Megalovania everywhere.)
[1] https://github.com/yuxshao/ptcollab
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A note from our sponsor - SaaSHub
www.saashub.com | 4 May 2024
Stats
yuxshao/ptcollab is an open source project licensed under MIT License which is an OSI approved license.
The primary programming language of ptcollab is C++.
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