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1994-09-24
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Do you have a dumb Mac? Of course I'm not accusing
your favorite computer of being stupid, but if you
have a mute Mac, you're not making use of its full
potential to speak, sing and chirp.
One person who certainly doesn't have a silent Mac
is Macintosh RoundTable staff member Jerry Kindall.
By day, Jerry's a technical writer and magazine
editor for a major mail-order computer retailer in
the education market. On his own time, besides
reading, hacking and going online, Jerry describes
his "other passion" as music. Along with an
eclectic collection of over 450 CDs, Jerry plays
and composes in his home MIDI studio.
Bulletin Board Fun
You'll find Jerry and other Mac music and sound
mavens hanging out in Bulletin Board Category 8
(Multimedia) of the Mac RoundTable, exchanging
experiences and opinions on hardware and software.
For example, in Topic 4 (MIDI software) James
Bordner recently cast his vote for Performer 5.0 as
"the very best Mac sequencer." As he describes his
evaluation process, "This comes from a die-hard
Atari/Notator/Export user who bought a Performa 450
in January. Performer 5.0 was the clear choice
after 3 months of reading, testing and side-by-
side evaluations with Vision. (I was making a
purchase decision for a group of players doing long
distance collaboration, so I had to do the right
thing or live with the guilt, don't you know)."
In that same Category, Topic 8 (Sounds), the recent
questions "Is there any problems with copied
sounds?" and "Is there such a thing as copyrighted
sounds?" set off a lively discussion about the
complex and still-evolving issue of copyright law
in the multimedia age.
Music Downloads
Loads of interesting sound-related files are
available for downloading from the Mac RoundTable
Library. For example, File 32711 SOUNDAPP.CPT V1.2
provides a freeware "one-stop sound player and
converter" that can play or convert just about any
sound or music file format including MOD, SND
resources, SoundCap, SoundEdit, AIFF, WAV, VOC, and
others.
Anyone shopping for music editing software should
take a look at ENCORE DEMO 3.0.6.SEA, a recent
addition to the Mac RoundTable MIDI Library.
Although you can't save or print from this
demonstration file, it will certainly help you
decide if it's the right program to purchase.
Another fine music-oriented file in the MIDI
Library is 21618 HOW TO PLAY KEYBOARD. This is an
electronic version of the book "The Musical Idiot's
Complete Guide to Improvisation at the Keyboard."
Speaking of multimedia, file 32766 GRABAUDIO.SIT is
a program that will read digital audio data
directly from a CD and save it to disk where you
can explore it. It requires CD-ROM software version
4 or higher and an Apple CD300 player or better.
Jerry describes 32831 WAVEWINDOW.SIT V2.1, a
software oscilloscope, as a fascinating program. It
displays sound visually on your screen in
real-time, and provides several different modes
including dynamic color waveforms.
If you play guitar and have a Mac with sound input
capability, take a look at 32730 GUITAR.TUNER V2.0.
The tuner alone has a shareware fee of $12, and the
author offers a package deal that includes a guitar
tuner, chromatic tuner, lab meter and other useful
items.
Recently uploaded Mac Library files of general
interest include the latest version of Apple's
QuickTime, 32634 QUICKTIME 1.6.2.SIT; 32633
SPEEDYFINDER7 1.5.9F.SIT, an award-winning
shareware Control Panel that offers many useful
improvements to the System 7 Finder; and 32632 EYE
ON THE CLOCK.SIT, a set of continuously updating
time counters (essential for clock watchers
everywhere).
Tune Up
Mac owners who dabble in MIDI should also get
familiar with the MIDI RoundTable at Page 430,
keyword MIDI. You'll find discussions about
Macintosh music hardware and software in Category 2
on the Bulletin Board, and loads of great music
files in the Library there.
So tune up your Mac and start making it sing. It's
easy -- with a little help from your Macintosh
friends on GEnie.