Guitar Hero vs. C64

A friend of mine, CCP, recently showed me the latest PlayStation hit: Guitar Hero. I felt this was a funny game and figured out that there is a similar PC conversion (originating in the demoscene, of course) called Frets on Fire. Now what is this game about? Imagine you’re a rock star, playing rock music on a gamepad/joystick replacement being built into some cheap plastic guitar. Five colored button replace the strings of the guitar, a up/down button simulates hitting the chords. For the PC conversion, you use your keyboard: F1 trough F5 for the strings and ENTER to bend. Interesting, you say, but how is this related to the C64? I can tell you: Some crazy mind called Toni Westbrook had the idea to create a hardware interface to be able to connect one of these plastic guitars to the C64. His project/game is called Shredz64 I felt this was worth mentioning because C64 hardware extensions are always cool.

A C64 with the Shredz64 interfaceToni has a journal page where he reports on the ongoings on the project. Up to the of writing, he already managed to read buttons states and display them on the C64 screens. As far as I know, the hardware interface is more or less finished and he’s now working on implementing a game that support the guitar. As the SID tune lover I am, I imagine this will be very cool. To play SID tunes with a guitar is certainly interesting. I just wonder if Toni has been thinking of the fact that the C64 only has 3 voices. Let’s see what’s going on with this project in the future.

Read Toni’s journal at http://freedomirc.net/~megaboz/shredz64/.

Similarities EP

Genox did it again and, despite all the prophecies of doom, released a new EP. This time it’s called “Similarities” and features 5 tracks, including the previously released Transatlantic Fiberglass track (which I already mentioned in Demoscene Music Favourites).

Similarities

Those five tracks of electronic music are an excellent soundtrack for work hours as well as for chill hours. There’s everything, from downtempo blips to faster beats, broad noise and melodic soundscapes. Beside track 4 “Transatlantic Fiberglass”, I like track 2 “Melobotter” most. That’s just music as I love it from Genox. Track 1 “Ninjagirls” seems to be a firstie to me: Genox operating a vocoder - nice feature and a really nice track. Track 5 “Orbit” comes with these typical musical cliffhangers I adore so much: The music’s constantly thrilling me, all the time it seems to be breaking out and the main part seems to be near, but it keeps going and going. A nice floating melody with that pushing beat. Excellent! Finally, track 3 “Streamtrain” has the shape of good old Genox sound as we know it. Experimental noise and a vast amount of bleeps and blings all over.

Go grab this high quality music pack of electronic sounds from archive.org. And Genox: Thanks, you made my day!

Update 31/01/07 Genox asked me to put my little review to his archive-org site. See it.

Visiting iTunes

Recently, everybody was speaking about iTunes and how cool it was. I decided to give it a go. Because I don’t own any Apple hardware and thus no MacOS, I had to chose the Windows version which seemed to work well too. Playing around with it showed it was fine, with a few drawbacks:

  • Playing back Ogg Vorbis files crashed iTunes
  • You need some weird Apple iTunes Music Store account to easily load cover art
  • No hot folders - my old MP3 collection, sorted by folders and filenames is not really compatible with the ID3-tag based iTunes structure. Some work ahead ;-)
  • I have no iPod


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Release of PAiN

PAiN 12/06 ScreenshotIn case you’re wondering what I’ve been up to during Christmas: We have managed to release another issue of the diskmag PAiN at the after-Christmas demo party TUM. This is a notable thing since it’s the first issue since 14 months. Now, a bit more than a week later, I can see that there are around 1300 downloads from scene.org. This shows me, that PAiN is still important enough to be released. We’ll keep it up.
You can read more about PAiN and download all issues from http://pain.scene.org.

Demoscene music favourites

Once in a while, when DRS3 (the local radio station for “modern” music in Switzerland) gets boring because of the ever-repeating same charts music, I switch on my Winamp and listen to demoscene music at work. Since a while, we’re firewall-ed, packet filtered and whatever there is and I can’t listen to the Nectarine live stream anymore. I started collecting quite a bunch of demoscene tracks on my local work harddisk which I then load into my playlist. Since now, in Christmas time, you can’t listen to DRS3 because of all the Christmas tunes, I had the idea to enlist my favourite Top 5 of demoscene songs here in my blog. What else do I have the blog for?

Note that these songs don’t necessarily are released in 2006 - it’s just my personal charts of what I’ve been listening to most this year (mostly counting October - December).

  1. Little Bitchard - Choose Zero Polys And Shaders [download]
  2. Paniq - Saturday Bam [download]
  3. Lug00ber - Out The Exits (Extended) [download]
  4. Reed - Tonite Fairlite (Live at Breakpoint 2020) [download]
  5. Genox - Transatlantic Fiberglass [download]

Thank you dudes, for providing me with that much stunning music!

Mobile phone as a remote control

The Bluetooth Remote Control showing a Windows desktopWhen I recently visited my friend Genox, I discovered the idea to use a mobile phone as a remote control for my PC. He was using his phone as a remote control for iTunes on his Apple laptop. However that didn’t work properly, “probably because of a somewhat bad bluetooth antenna” he said. Yes, a mobile phone remote control working trough bluetooth is a splendid idea, in my opinion. A few days later, I browsed the web for a similar application which would work on my Nokia phone and I found something nice: “Bluetooth Remote Control 2.0″.


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The unbelievable: Unlock has a blog/new site

It’s been a while since there were changes on my website. Luckily, with today’s tools, I was able to avoid boring HTML typing and so - here we go: I started a new website and blog. I’m not quite sure how I’ll be using the blog, but be sure that I’ll try to post here and there. Please note, that the site will be constantly expanded - it’s far from being finished :-D


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