used talktotransformer.com for inspiration:
What comes after white noise? This is one of those things that just never occurred to me before. It doesn’t have any real purpose, but it’s there nonetheless… and the result is that when I don’t hear it I think ‘Wow, this is nice’, when it gets into my head and I need to hear it for fun or something I find myself listening to it. I was listening to an album I listened to once… it was the track ‘Halloween’. I think this is what I was listening to… the ‘jazz’ theme which was like a sort of ambient ‘psychedelic’ thing I never got into before. But as it got older (like, 10-15 years ago… I guess it’s about then) and it started to evolve… this song came on and it was like ‘Wow I can hear this through my headphones. It’s all I need’. It just happened.
Do you have any other examples of you listening to music through headphones that you don’t know about? Is there anything else that you’ve done that you thought was pretty neat and did not sound the same in the first place?
I have to say the two most notable things is I know that I can
White noise
Directional noise
All of these were produced by an app named “Dynamo” (or in some cases, “M-Wave”). This was developed by German engineers for the Germans’ Navy. D-Wave software had to be modified to include both spatial and lateral filtering to make the product actually useable within a small range for the British Navy. The app also included noise shaping so that certain parts of the wave pattern could be smoothed without sacrificing the original pattern of the data.
For the German Navy, this produced one of the most precise and valuable data processing solutions available. The British had been making significant progress in data processing technology in the mid 20th century since the invention of the vacuum tube and then radar and then digital video decoders. This new technology required precise data processing, an almosery on scale and precision which had had to be accomplished with other devices. The Germans managed this task and the British could do it too, but not with the precision that needed to be achieved.
D-Wave is a commercial processor which uses a proprietary software called Ondesim, for “Object Detection Software” which is widely used in other areas such as the National Security
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generated white noise in audacity then put that thru a midi file in live