no, not really. you could tweak them and re-add back all the modifications but that might be a huge hassle.
Take a look at the patches and i could potentially find the original stuff for you

Because you know with pd you can just about do everything :slight_smile:

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You can run organelle patches on the desktop using the “mother desktop” patch. Simulates the basic functions of the organelle controls.

http://patchstorage.com/desktop-mother/

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Thanks for the tip Jason!

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Hi ShreeSwifty! A few weeks ago I saw that you received the .c code for some of the SoundHack externals from Tom Erbe. Did you have any luck compiling these for Arch Linux? Or, do you still have the .c code? I’d like to get these up and running on my Raspberry Pi which also runs arch linux.

OT: Her work is so so so inspiring and fun!

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pitchdelay~.c.zip (4.4 KB)
Tom gave me the .c for pitchdelay~ Good Lck and let me know if you get a working .pd_linux from it on Arch

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Hey Folks

Tom release the source for the soundhack externals so…
https://patchstorage.com/bubbler/

IMHO we now have a full array of musical creation tools working on organelle
Everything from FM–> to Spectral :slight_smile:

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This is a transformational move. No wonder you’re so excited about this platform, @shreeswifty

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@shreeswifty thanks so much for compiling these for arch linux! I don’t organelle but will try them on my R Pi (which is also arch linux) and see what happens! Any advice for compiling other externals in the same manner that you did? I’m new when it comes to compiling.

Ive joined the Organelle crowd :slight_smile:

Not quite sure why… I seem to be addicted to these small machines, given also use Bela and Axoloti…

My initial impressions, Organelle is great out of the box, Ive only played with the factory patches so far, and I really like them , they are pretty creative and sound pretty good, looking forward to seeing what the community (and @shreeswifty in particular!) has put together.

Im also pretty happy about how I’m going to ‘integrate’ it into what I do - I think with Organelle and Bela, Im going to be able to pretty much develop the simultaneously, by using Pure Data as the ‘glue’… i.e. I write the main code in C++ , wrap in a PD external, and viola it will run on both Organelle and Bela - so I just use on the platform I need (e.g. instrument building/low latency = Bela, ready to use now = Organelle)

Ive already done a proof of concept, where I have ported the Mutable Instruments stuff we did for Axoloti (Rings/Clouds/Elements/Braids/Warps) , wrapped in a PD External, and can run it on Organelle or Bela, all I do, is just have to write the standalone wrapper thats specific (e.g. using analog in for Bela or encoders on Organelle).

hmmm… perhaps I need to create a PD External container for axoloti :wink:

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@TheTechnoBear are these MI ports available for download somewhere?

at the moment the externals are ‘under development’ , which means the inlets and messages they take are still changing, (and I’m also ‘playing’ with how I want to expose the Braids functionality, as Im taking a different approach to the way it works on axoloti)

so I ‘released’ a couple of the simple rings externals on patchstorage for organelle.

the code I’m working on is all in my repo, in a repo called TB_puredata (though its likely to be renamed at some point)

but this repo is very much ‘work in progress’, so dont build anything too elaborate on it, as the interfaces will change, which is why Im also not releasing binaries yet - they should though build on windows/mac/linux (arm and intel) / bela

once ive completed their interfaces, then I’ll add help patches, and probably standalone patches for bela and organelle.

(the externals built for Organelle should of course also work on a rPI3, all arm7)

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Super exciting, thanks for sharing!

your welcome - though the main thanks need to go to Oliver at Mutable Instruments, its his generosity of open sourcing his code, which has made anything like this possible.

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I’ll patiently wait for them to be in a more mature status since when I execute a make command the computer always explodes with a loud bang (no idea why), so keep us posted about it!

I renamed the repo to Mi4Pd a few days back,so you might need to update repo config to get latest versions.

but make should not fail, I regularly build it on mac, windows and linux (arm)…

‘explodes with a loud bang’ doesn’t give me a lot to go on, id say the likely cause is your build environment is not setup correctly/as expected

note: on windows I use msys mingw32… I dont know if it will work directly with VS, and sorry, Ive no intention of trying, I’m a command line kinda guy :wink:

oh and you will need pure data installed, probably in its default location…
I could remove this dependancy, but I like to know I’m compiling against the latest/installed m_pd.h interface, rather than some copy ive taken (which is what quite a few others externals do) … but I might review this in the future :wink:

have a go with the above, and let me know if you still have problems, or if you fix it…
Id like to add some build notes which could incorporate any ‘frequent issues’ people have.

What I wanted to say is that make always fails with me, and I really mean always. Don’t ask me why. I think it’s a curse. Not once in my life I have been able to execute a make and just get a nice compiled binary out of it. I guess it’s a curse of some kind. In the meantime I have given up and let the people who know how do it take care of it instead of wasting everybody’s time with questions like “why doesn’t it work?”.

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I think this is the proper one. It looks like this has already been done but we could definitely use the monome for a visual sequencer here at shreeswifty labs :slight_smile:
So do i need to build serialosc for Arch first or is this already been conquered?

Sorry just gettingup to speed on this

pp

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I think the post you want is here:


and the person who can answer your questions about it is @quilime.

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Thank you for posting this

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